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Writing in
College:

From Competence
to Excellence

Amy Guptill

The College at Brockport, SUNY

Writing in College: From


Competence to Excellence
Amy Guptill
with Aly Button, Peter Farrell, Kaethe Leonard, and
Timothe Pizarro
The College at Brockport, SUNY

Open SUNY Textbooks


2016

2016 Amy Guptill


ISBN: 978-1-942341-21-5 ebook

This work is licensed under a


Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
You are free to:
Share copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format
Adapt remix, transform, and build upon the material

The licensor cannot revoke these freedoms as long as you follow the license terms.
Under the following terms:

Attribution You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and
indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in
any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.
NonCommercial You may not use the material for commercial purposes.

ShareAlike If you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you must distribute your contributions under the same license as the original.

This publication was made possible by a SUNY Innovative Instruction Technology


Grant (IITG). IITG is a competitive grants program open to SUNY faculty and support
staff across all disciplines. IITG encourages development of innovations that meet the
Power of SUNYs transformative vision.
Published by Open SUNY Textbooks, Milne Library (IITG PI)
State University of New York at Geneseo,
Geneseo, NY 14454

About the Book


Writing in College is designed for students who have largely mastered high-school level
conventions of formal academic writing and are now moving beyond the five-paragraph
essay to more advanced engagement with text. It is well suited to composition courses or
first-year seminars and valuable as a supplemental or recommended text in other writingintensive classes. It provides a friendly, down-to-earth introduction to professors goals and
expectations, demystifying the norms of the academy and how they shape college writing
assignments. Each of the nine chapters can be read separately, and each includes suggested
exercises to bring the main messages to life.

Students will find in Writing in College a warm invitation to join the academic community as
novice scholars and to approach writing as a meaningful medium of communication. With
concise discussions, clear multidisciplinary examples, and empathy for the challenges of
student life, Guptill conveys a welcoming tone. In addition, each chapter includes Student
Voices: peer-to-peer wisdom from real SUNY Brockport students about their strategies for
and experiences with college writing.
While there are many affordable writing guides available, most focus only on sentence-level
issues or, conversely, a broad introduction to making the transition. Writing In College, in
contrast, provides both a coherent frame for approaching writing assignments and indispensable advice for effective organization and expression.

About the Author


Amy Guptill is an Associate Professor of Sociology at The College at Brockport, SUNY
where she has a joint appointment with the Delta College Program, an alternative interdisciplinary General Education option. Her research focuses on spatial and structural shifts
in agriculture and food systems with recent work on innovative agricultural marketing. She
teaches courses in the sociology of food, development and globalization, community and
social change, social statistics and college writing. In addition to Writing In College: From
Competence to Excellence, and she is the coauthor of a recent college textbook entitled Food
& Society: Principles and Paradoxes (Malden, MA: Polity, 2012).

Reviewers Notes
Writing in College: From Competence to Excellence assists well-prepared high school students
as they transition to college writing, helping them understand how they, as young independent scholars, fit into the university and can improve their writing to succeed in their new
environment. Focusing on the argument-driven essay, Guptill guides beginning college
students through the sometimes arcane practices of the academy and does so with warmth,
enthusiasm, and humor. The textbook takes students through deciphering assignments, developing sophisticated arguments, finding and using appropriate sources, and some basics
of paragraphing, sentence structure, and style. Instructors will find this textbook to be a
handy tool for explaining the argument-driven essay and reference for addressing common
college-level writing issues. With a diverse range of examples, useful references to other
sources, and purposeful exercises, Writing in College focuses on developing students skills
in practical waysand helps students understand why their instructors have them do what
they do.
Jennifer Haytock is professor and chair in the English Department at the College at Brockport,
SUNY.

About Open SUNY Textbooks


Open SUNY Textbooks is an open access textbook publishing initiative established by
State University of New York libraries and supported by SUNY Innovative Instruction
Technology Grants. This initiative publishes high-quality, cost-effective course resources
by engaging faculty as authors and peer-reviewers, and libraries as publishing service and
infrastructure.
The pilot launched in 2012, providing an editorial framework and service to authors, students and faculty, and establishing a community of practice among libraries.

Participating libraries in the 2012-2013 pilot include SUNY Geneseo, College at Brockport, College of Environmental Science and Forestry, SUNY Fredonia, Upstate Medical
University, and University at Buffalo, with support from other SUNY libraries and SUNY
Press. The 2013-2014 pilot will add more titles in 2015. More information can be found at
http://textbooks.opensuny.org.

Contents
Chapter 1
Really? Writing? Again?

Chapter 2
What Does the Professor Want? Understanding the Assignment

Chapter 3
Constructing the Thesis and ArgumentFrom the Ground Up

19

Chapter 4
Secondary Sources in Their Natural Habitats

28

Chapter 5
Listening to Sources, Talking to Sources

38

Chapter 6
Back to Basics: The Perfect Paragraph

48

Chapter 7
Intros and Outros

57

Chapter 8
Clarity and Concision

65

Chapter 9
Getting the Mechanics Right

75

Chapter 1

Really? Writing? Again?

Yes. Writing. Again.


Obviously you can write. And in the age of Facebook and smartphones, you might be
writing all the time, perhaps more often than speaking. Many students today are awash in
text like no other generation before. You may have even performed so well in high school
that youre deemed fully competent in college level writing and are now excused from
taking a composition course.
So why spend yet more time and attention on writing skills? Research shows that deliberate
practicethat is, close focus on improving ones skillsmakes all the difference in how
one performs. Revisiting the craft of writingespecially on the early end of collegewill
improve your writing much more than simply producing page after page in the same old
way. Becoming an excellent communicator will save you a lot of time and hassle in your
studies, advance your career, and promote better relationships and a higher quality of life off
the job. Honing your writing is a good use of your scarce time.

Also consider this: a recent survey of employers conducted by the Association of American
Colleges and Universities found that 89 percent of employers say that colleges and universities should place more emphasis on the ability to effectively communicate orally and in
writing.1 It was the single-most favored skill in this survey. In addition, several of the other
valued skills are grounded in written communication: Critical thinking and analytical
reasoning skills (81%); The ability to analyze and solve complex problems (75%); and
The ability to locate, organize, and evaluate information from multiple sources (68%). This
emphasis on communication probably reflects the changing reality of work in the professions. Employers also reported that employees will have to take on more responsibilities,
use a broader set of skills, work harder to coordinate with other departments, face more
complex challenges, and mobilize higher levels of learning and knowledge.2 If you want

Hart Research Associates, Raising the Bar: Employers Views on College Learning in the Wake of the
Economic Downturn, http://www.aacu.org/leap/documents/2009_EmployerSurvey.pdf, 9.
2
Ibid., 5.
1

Really? Writing? Again?|1

Writing in College: From Competence to Excellence

Guptill

to be a professional who interacts frequently with others3presumably you do; youre in


collegeyou have to be someone who can anticipate and solve complex problems and
coordinate your work with others,4 all of which depend on effective communication.

Writing is one of the most important skills to our society, and it almost
always has been. Having the ability to write is what separates history from
pre-history! Thats a pretty big deal! Because most professors have different expectations, it can be tricky knowing what exactly theyre looking
for. Pay attention to the comments they leave on your paper, and make
sure to use these as a reference for your next assignment. I try to pay attention and adapt to the professors style and preferences.
Aly Button
The pay-off from improving your writing comes much sooner than graduation. Suppose
you complete about 40 classes for a 120-credit bachelors degree, andaveraging across
writing-intensive and non-writing-intensive coursesyou produce about 2500 words of
formal writing per class. Even with that low estimate, youll write 100,000 words over your
college career. Thats about equivalent to a 330-page book. Spending a few hours sharpening
your writing skills will make those 100,000 words much easier and more rewarding to
write. All of your professors care about good writing, whether or not they see their courses
as a means to improve it. Formal written work is the coin of the academic realm. Creating
and sharing knowledgethe whole point of the academydepends on writing. You may
have gotten a lot of positive feedback on your writing before college, but its important to
note that writing in college is distinct in ways that reflect the origins of higher education.

The origins of higher education


College may look and feel similar to high school, and, for the most part, you already know
how to perform your student role within this setting. However, there are some fundamental
differences. The most obvious ones are that high school is mandatory (to a certain point),
freely available, and a legal right. They have to offer you the opportunity, regardless of your
grades. College is optional, costly, and performance-based. Most institutions will dismiss
you if your grades dont meet a certain minimum. But college is different in more subtle
ways as well, and those differences reflect the evolution of the university.
In their original ancient and medieval forms, universities were centers for scholarship, existing at the pleasure of the crown, church, or state. While centers of study go at least back
to ancient Mesopotamia 2500 years BCE, the Islamic and European universities of the first
and second millennium CE are usually considered the first of the modern model. Highly
privileged people went to these universities as students, but they didnt really attend classes,
If you dont want to be as interactive, but you want to make good money, youre better off
seeking training in a skilled building trade like plumbing or electrical work. Frankly, a lot of
plumbers make more money than a lot of your professors!
4
Hart Research Associates, It Takes More Than a Major: Employer Priorities for College Learning
and Student Success. http://www.aacu.org/sites/default/files/files/LEAP/2013_EmployerSurvey.pdf.
3

Really? Writing? Again?|2

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write papers, and take exams like college students today. Instead they acted as independent,
though novice, scholars: they read everything they could find in their areas of interest,
attended lectures that expert scholars gave, and, if they were lucky (and perhaps charming),
got some feedback from those scholars on their own work or assisted scholars in theirs.5
Students were simply the most junior of scholars at a university, enjoying the extraordinary
privilege of interacting with the revered academic superstars of their day.
Obviously, colleges and universities today are much more student-centered,6 and most
higher education faculty spend most of their time carefully crafting educational experiences
for students. But the notion of the university as a center for scholarship and exchange still
shapes how colleges and universities operate today. Some points:

1. Professors are scholars and artists: Most of your professors have had little to no formal
training in pedagogy (the science of teaching). Theyre extensively trained in their
scholarly or creative fields, well versed in relevant theories, methods, and significant
findings. Many taught during graduate school, but most come to their jobs relative
novices about teaching. Professors apply themselves to the craft of teaching with
the same creative and intellectual fervor that drew them into their fields. They
attend conferences and presentations about effective teaching and learning (such
as The Lilly Conference, the AAC&U, or the American Educational Research Association), keep journals and portfolios to reflect on their teaching work, and read
books and articles about cognitive neuroscience, trends in higher education, and
the social worlds of their students. There are some professors who still see themselves in the classical modelas someone who delivers content through lectures
and assesses performance through a final exam or term paper, but that approach
is becoming ever rarer. Almost all professors seek out innovative and engaging
pedagogies.

2. Professors have competing obligations: While you may view your professors primarily
as teachers,7 your instructors are also collecting data, writing books and articles,
making films, writing poetry, consulting with businesses and organizations, or inventing things. Even those who spend a majority of their time on teaching think of
themselves as scholars or artists who also teach.8 Scholarship and creative activity
are central ways that colleges and universities serve society. In addition to educated
graduates, higher education also produces ideas, findings, and innovations. High
You may have noticed that some instructors have the title assistant professor or associate
professor. Its because in the original European model there could be only one Professor for a
given topic, and those other titles were developed for younger scholars. Nowadays most universities
have several professors. Many newer faculty are still called assistant professors even though they
dont assist other faculty.
6
As students became a larger and larger presence at European universities, colleges emerged
as semi-autonomous units within universities to provide housing, meals, and venues for social
interaction. The model of the stand-alone college emerged in the Americas after European
colonization.
7
At big research universities, a full-time faculty member might teach only one or two
courses a year. At a community college, an instructor might teach five or six classes a semester.
Undergraduate four-year colleges are usually somewhere in between.
8
This is why some instructors are VERY persnickety about being addressed as Doctor or
Professor and not Mr. or Ms. Not all fields have doctoral degreesfor example, many
professors in the arts have MFA degrees (Masters of Fine Arts) -- but Professor is always an
appropriate choice for addressing your instructors.
5

Really? Writing? Again?|3

Writing in College: From Competence to Excellence

Guptill

school teachers, though similarly engaged in the craft of teaching, have much more
formal training in instruction and are more likely to see themselves primarily as
teachers, even those that are writing magazine articles, restoring wetland ecologies,
or composing music on the side.

3. Professors design their own classes: While both college professors and high school
teachers teach, one condition of their work is substantially different. Most high
school teachers in public school systems are contractually obligated to deliver
a particular curriculum and, in some cases, to use particular methods to do so.
The topics and materials are often determined by state regulators, local boards of
education, and school administrators. There is room for innovation, but under the
current mania for standards, many teachers are no longer treated (and respected)
like craftspersons in their own right. Higher education instructors still have a lot
more latitude than their high-school counterparts. Your instructor may be required
to cover particular concepts and skills or even assign a particular textbook, especially if one class is a prerequisite to more advanced classes. However, he or she still
has a lot of freedom to determine what students should learn, what they will do to
learn it, and how their achievements will be measured. As a result, two different
sections of the same college course (such as Ancient World History) could differ
dramatically, much more so than two parallel high school sections.
4. Students drive their own learning: The assumption behind high-school instruction
is that the teacher is the engine of learning. Consequently, a lot of time is spent in
direct face-to-face instruction. Homework is for further practice to reinforce material from that day. Teachers will often tell students what each nights homework
assignment is, follow up on missing work, and closely track students progress. The
assumption behind college instruction, in contrast, is that students are the engine
of learning, and that most of the significant learning happens outside of class while
students are working through a dense reading or other challenging intellectual task
on their own. Most college classes meet only 1-3 times a week for a total of about 3
hours. Consequently, college instructors think of class meetings as an opportunity
to prepare you for the heavy-lifting that youll be doing on your own. Sometimes
that involves direct instruction (how to solve a particular kind of problem or analyze a particular kind of text). More often, though, professors want to provide you
with material not contained in the reading or facilitate active learning experiences
based on what you read. The assumption is that all studentslike their medieval
counterpartshave the skill and self-motivation to carefully read all the assigned
texts. Professors lay out a path for learningmuch like how personal trainers develop exercise routinesbut it is up to students (and athletes) to do the difficult
work themselves.

While university systems have clearly shifted toward student-centered practices, colleges
and universities still see themselves as communities of scholars, some senior (i.e., faculty),
most junior (i.e., students). Your professors are passionate about their fields, and they want
to share their excitement with you as effectively as they can. However, they also know that
you came to them on a voluntary basis, and they fully expect you to take complete responsibility for your own learning.

Really? Writing? Again?|4

Writing in College: From Competence to Excellence

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College writing is different


The origins of the university help explain why even skilled wordsmiths benefit from studying
the assumptions and expectations behind college-level writing. College is a fundamentally different educational model; as a result the purposes and expectations for writing are
different. You have learned many of the essential skills and practices of formal written communication throughout your schooling; now its time to take your writing a step further.

By the end of high school you probably mastered many of the key conventions of standard
academic English such as paragraphing, sentence-level mechanics, and the use of thesis
statements. The essay portion of the SAT measures important skills such as organizing
evidence within paragraphs that relate to a clear, consistent thesis, and choosing words and
sentence structures to effectively convey your meaning. These practices are foundational,
and your teachers have given you a wonderful gift in helping you master them. However,
college writing assignments require you to apply those skills to new intellectual challenges.
Professors assign papers because they want you to think rigorously and deeply about important questions in their fields. To your instructors, writing is for working out complex
ideas, not just explaining them. A paper that would earn a top score on the SAT might only
get a C or D in a college class if it doesnt show original and ambitious thinking.

Professors look at you as independent junior scholars and imagine you writing as someone
who has a genuine, driving interest in tackling a complex question. They envision you approaching an assignment without a pre-existing thesis. They expect you to look deep into
the evidence, consider several alternative explanations, and work out an original, insightful
argument that you actually care about. This kind of scholarly approach usually entails
writing a rough draft, through which you work out an ambitious thesis and the scope of
your argument, 9 and then starting over with a wholly rewritten second draft containing
a mostly complete argument anchored by a refined thesis. In that second round, youll
discover holes in the argument that should be remedied, counter-arguments that should
be acknowledged and addressed, and important implications that should be noted. When
the paper is substantially complete, youll go through it again to tighten up the writing and
ensure clarity.10 Writing a paper isnt about getting the right answer and adhering to basic
conventions; its about joining an academic conversation with something original to say,
borne of rigorous thought.

My own experience as an instructor indicates that few students approach writing college
papers in the way that professors envision. Many students first figure out what they want to
say and then (and only then) write it down as clearly (and quickly) as they can. One quick
round of proof-reading and theyre done. Many students have a powerful distaste for truly
revising (i.e., actually rewriting) a paper because it feels like throwing away hard-won text.
Consequently, when students are invited or required to revise an essay, they tend to focus
on correcting mechanical errors, making a few superficial changes that do not entail any
rethinking or major changes. Professors find that tendency incredibly frustrating. Some
instructors craft an assignment sequence to force a true revising process; others leave it up
The term of art for this, coined by novelist and memoirist Anne Lamott is shitty first drafts.
Zero draft is a more polite term for it.
10
Most parts of this book, for example, took about four drafts to write even though theyre based
on lecture notes that Ive been developing for years.
9

Really? Writing? Again?|5

Writing in College: From Competence to Excellence

Guptill

to you. Virtually all shape their expectations for the final project around the idea that youre
writing to learn, writing to develop, writing to thinknot just writing to express.

On my first college paper, I was scared. I did not know what to expect or
what my professor would want. All I kept thinking about was whether
or not I would get a good grade. But do not fear! At the end of the day,
I talked to my professor about how I could better my writing. Professors
love to be asked questions and interact with students. If you ever need
help, do not hesitate to ask for advice on how you could do better.
Timothe Pizarro
Another major impact of this shift to a junior-scholar role is that you not only have to learn
to write like a scholar, you also have to learn to write like a political scientist, a chemist,
an art historian, and a statisticiansometimes all in the same semester. While most of the
conventions of academic writing are common across disciplines, there is some variation.
Your professorsimmersed as they are in their own fieldsmay forget that you have such
varied demands, and they may not take class time to explain the particular conventions of
their field. For every new field of study, youre like a traveler visiting a foreign culture and
learning how to get along. Locals will often do you the kindness of explaining something,
but youll have to sleuth out a lot of things on your own.

So what do professors want?


At one time or another, most students will find themselves frustrated by a professors recalcitrant refusal to simply Tell us what you want! Its a natural feeling and, at times, a
legitimate one. While all professors want to set you up to succeed, they may find their
expectations hard to articulate, in part because they struggle to remember what its like
to be a beginner in the field. Often, however, the bigger and better reason that professors
wont just tell you what to do is that there simply isnt a particular answer they want you to
give in the paper. They want to see your own ambitious and careful analysis. Some students
assume that they should be able to envision a paper and its thesis within minutes of receiving the assignment; if not, they complain that the assignment is unclear. Other students
assume that every professor has a completely different set of expectations and, consequently,
conclude that writing papers is just an unavoidable guessing game about entirely subjective
and idiosyncratic standards. Neither of those assumptions are true. Good, well constructed
writing assignments are supposed to be challenging to write, and professors are, above all,
looking for your own self-motivated intellectual work.
Despite some variations by discipline, college instructors are bringing similar standards to
evaluating student work. Recently, the Association of American Colleges and Universities has brought together faculty members from across the country to deliberate on the
core knowledge and skills that define liberal arts education. They have also worked out
benchmarks of success, as summarized in a rubric for written communication. Check it
out! While few instructors are sitting down with the AAC&U rubric to determine grades
on papers, you can be confident that these are the kinds of things almost all professors are
Really? Writing? Again?|6

Writing in College: From Competence to Excellence

Guptill

looking for. The language of the capstone column illustrates especially well the scholarly
mindset and independent work habits they expect students to bring to their work:
thorough understanding of context, audience, and purpose,
mastery of the subject,
detailed attention to writing conventions,
skillful use of high-quality, credible, relevant sources, and
graceful language.

Professors want to see that youve thought through a problem and taken the time and effort
to explain your thinking in precise language.

The following chapters in this book seek to concretize these ideas. They begin with the most
fundamental issues (the purpose of the assignment and the thesis), move through organizational strategies, and end with sentence-level expression. The expectations laid out here may
seem dauntingand perhaps unreasonable, given that very few of you are going to follow
your professors into academic life. But communication isnt just about expressing yourself;
its about connecting with others. And its other peoplein families, couples, communities,
and workplacesthat shape the most important experiences of your life.

Dont get discouraged! On my first college paper I got a very low grade.
It felt like a slap in the face because I was a straight-A student in high
school. Its just a fact of life. Talk to your professor about what you could
have done differently. This will help you be better prepared for future
papers.
Kaethe Leonard

Other resources
1. The Transition to College Writing 2nd ed. (New York: Norton, 2009), by Keith
Hjortshoj (pronounced Hort-shoy) is written expressly for the new college student. It offers a nicely plain-spoken and comprehensive introduction to college
writing.

2. This online text (also called Writing In College) by Joseph M. Williams and
Lawrence McEnerney provides another good process-based run-down.
3. This fun website summarizes the daily routines of some famous writers.

Exercises
1. Interview a professor about his or her work. What drew them into their field?
What do they work on in their scholarly or creative endeavors? What do they most
enjoy about teaching? What behaviors do they like to see in students?

Really? Writing? Again?|7

Writing in College: From Competence to Excellence

Guptill

2. Go to Professor Stephen Chews website about good study practices and watch the
first video titled Beliefs that Make You Fail or Succeed. How can the concept
of metacognition be used to explain why good papers are challenging to write?

Really? Writing? Again?|8

Chapter 2

What Does the Professor


Want? Understanding the
Assignment

Writing for whom? Writing for what?


The first principle of good communication is knowing your audience. This is where writing
papers for class gets kind of weird. As Peter Elbow explains1:
When you write for a teacher you are usually swimming against the stream of
natural communication. The natural direction of communication is to explain what
you understand to someone who doesnt understand it. But in writing an essay
for a teacher your task is usually to explain what you are still engaged in trying to
understand to someone who understands it better.

Often when you write for an audience of one, you write a letter or email. But college papers
arent written like letters; theyre written like articles for a hypothetical group of readers that
you dont actually know much about. Theres a fundamental mismatch between the real-life
audience and the form your writing takes. Its kind of bizarre, really.

It helps to remember the key tenet of the university model: youre a junior scholar joining
the academic community. Academic papers, in which scholars report the results of their
research and thinking to one another, are the lifeblood of the scholarly world, carrying
useful ideas and information to all parts of the academic corpus. Unless there is a particular
audience specified in the assignment, you would do well to imagine yourself writing for
a group of peers who have some introductory knowledge of the field but are unfamiliar
with the specific topic youre discussing. Imagine them being interested in your topic but
also busy; try to write something that is well worth your readers time. Keeping an audience like this in mind will help you distinguish common knowledge in the field from that
which must be defined and explained in your paper. Understanding your audience like this
Peter Elbow, Writing With Power: Techniques for Mastering the Writing Process (Oxford University
Press, 1981), 219.
1

What Does the Professor Want? Understanding the Assignment|9

Writing in College: From Competence to Excellence

Guptill

also resolve the audience mismatch that Elbow describes. As he notes, You dont write to
teachers, you write for them.2

Another basic tenet of good communication is clarifying the purpose of the communication and letting that purpose shape your decisions. Your professor wants to see you work
through complex ideas and deepen your knowledge through the process of producing the
paper. Each assignmentbe it an argumentative paper, reaction paper, reflective paper, lab
report, discussion question, blog post, essay exam, project proposal, or what have youis
ultimately about your learning. To succeed with writing assignments (and benefit from
them) you first have to understand their learning-related purposes. As you write for the
hypothetical audience of peer junior scholars, youre demonstrating to your professor how
far youve gotten in analyzing your topic.

Dont be scared whenever you are given an assignment. Professors know


what it was like to be in college and write all kinds of papers. They arent
trying to make your lives difficult, but it is their jobs to make us think and
ponder about many things. Take your time and enjoy the paper. Make
sure you answer the question being asked rather than rant on about
something that is irrelevant to the prompt.
Timothe Pizarro
Professors dont assign writing lightly. Grading student writing is generally the hardest,
most intensive work instructors do.3 With every assignment they give you, professors assign
themselves many, many hours of demanding and tedious work that has to be completed
while they are also preparing for each class meeting, advancing their scholarly and creative
work, advising students, and serving on committees. Often, theyre grading your papers on
evenings and weekends because the conventional work day is already saturated with other
obligations. You would do well to approach every assignment by putting yourself in the
shoes of your instructor and asking yourself, Why did she give me this assignment? How
does it fit into the learning goals of the course? Why is this question/topic/problem so
important to my professor that he is willing to spend evenings and weekends reading and
commenting on several dozen novice papers on it?
As I briefly discussed in Chapter 1, most instructors do a lot to make their pedagogical
goals and expectations transparent to students: they explain the course learning goals associated with assignments, provide grading rubrics in advance, and describe several strategies
for succeeding. Other professors not so much. Some students perceive more open-ended
assignments as evidence of a lazy, uncaring, or even incompetent instructor. Not so fast!
Professors certainly vary in the quantity and specificity of the guidelines and suggestions
they distribute with each writing assignment. Some professors make a point to give very
few parameters about an assignmentperhaps just a topic and a length requirementand
they likely have some good reasons for doing so. Here are some possible reasons:
1. They figured it out themselves when they were students. Unsurprisingly, your instructors were generally successful students who relished the culture and traditions of
higher education so much that they strove to build an academic career. The current

Ibid., 220.
A lot of professors joke, I teach for free. They pay me to grade.

2
3

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emphasis on student-centered instruction is relatively recent; your instructors much


more often had professors who adhered to the classic model of college instruction:
they gave lectures together with, perhaps, one or two exams or papers. Students
were on their own to learn the lingo and conventions of each field, to identify the
key concepts and ideas within readings and lectures, and to sleuth out instructors
expectations for written work. Learning goals, rubrics, quizzes, and preparatory
assignments were generally rare.

2. They think figuring it out yourself is good for you. Because your professors by and large
succeeded in a much less supportive environment, they appreciate how learning to
thrive in those conditions gave them life-long problem-solving skills. Many think
you should be able to figure it out yourself and that it would be good practice for
you to do so. Even those who do include a lot of guidance with writing assignments
sometimes worry that theyre depriving you of an important personal and intellectual challenge. Figuring out unspoken expectations is a valuable skill in itself.

3. Theyre egg-heads. As I explained in Chapter 1, many of your instructors have been


so immersed in their fields that they may struggle to remember what it was like
to encounter a wholly new discipline for the first time. The assumptions, practices,
and culture of their disciplines are like the air they breathe; so much so that it is
hard to describe to novices. They may assume that a verb like analyze is selfevident, forgetting that it can mean very different things in different fields. As a
student, you voluntarily came to study with the scholars, artists, and writers at your
institution. Rightly or wrongly, the burden is ultimately on you to meet them where
they are.
4. Professors value academic freedom; that is, they firmly believe that their high-level
expertise in their fields grants them the privilege of deciding what is important to
focus on and how to approach it. As I also explain in Chapter 1, college professors
differ in this way from high school teachers who are usually obligated to address
a defined curriculum. Professors are often extremely wary of anything that seems
to threaten academic freedom. Some see specified learning goals and standardized
rubrics as the first step in a process that would strip higher education of its independence, scholarly innovation, and sense of discovery. While a standardized set of
expectations and practices might make it easier to earn a degree, its also good to
consider the benefits of the more flexible and diversified model.

It is understandably frustrating when you feel you dont know how to direct your efforts to
succeed with an assignment. However, except for rare egregious situations, you would do
well to assume the best of your instructor and to appreciate the diversity of learning opportunities you have access to in college. Like one first-year student told Keith Hjortshoj4,
I think that every course, every assignment, is a different little puzzle I have to solve. What
do I need to do here? When do I need to do it, and how long will it take? What does this
teacher expect of me? The transparency that you get from some professorsalong with
guides like this onewill be a big help to you in situations where you have to be scrappier
and more pro-active, piecing together the clues you get from your professors, the readings,
and other course documents.

Keith Hjortshoj, The Transition to College Writing, 2nd Edition (New York: Norton, 2009), 4.

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The prompt: what does analyze mean


anyway?
Often, the handout or other written text explaining the assignmentwhat professors call the
assignment promptwill explain the purpose of the assignment, the required parameters
(length, number and type of sources, referencing style, etc.), and the criteria for evaluation.
Sometimes, thoughespecially when you are new to a fieldyou will encounter the baffling situation in which you comprehend every single sentence in the prompt but still have
absolutely no idea how to approach the assignment. No one is doing anything wrong in a
situation like that. It just means that further discussion of the assignment is in order. Here
are some tips:
1. Focus on the verbs. Look for verbs like compare, explain, justify, reflect or the
all-purpose analyze. Youre not just producing a paper as an artifact; youre conveying, in written communication, some intellectual work you have done. So the
question is, what kind of thinking are you supposed to do to deepen your learning?

2. Put the assignment in context. Many professors think in terms of assignment sequences. For example, a social science professor may ask you to write about a
controversial issue three times: first, arguing for one side of the debate; second,
arguing for another; and finally, from a more comprehensive and nuanced perspective, incorporating text produced in the first two assignments. A sequence like that
is designed to help you think through a complex issue. Another common one is
a scaffolded research paper sequence: you first propose a topic, then prepare an
annotated bibliography, then a first draft, then a final draft, and, perhaps, a reflective paper. The preparatory assignments help ensure that youre on the right track,
beginning the research process long before the final due date, and taking the time
to consider recasting your thesis, finding additional sources, or reorganizing your
discussion.5
If the assignment isnt part of a sequence, think about where it falls in the semester,
and how it relates to readings and other assignments. Are there headings on the
syllabus that indicate larger units of material? For example, if you see that a paper
comes at the end of a three-week unit on the role of the Internet in organizational
behavior, then your professor likely wants you to synthesize that material in your
own way. You should also check your notes and online course resources for any
other guidelines about the workflow. Maybe you got a rubric a couple weeks ago
and forgot about it. Maybe your instructor posted a link about how to make an
annotated bibliography but then forgot to mention it in class.

3. Try a free-write. When I hand out an assignment, I often ask students to do a


five-minute or ten-minute free-write. A free-write is when you just write, without
stopping, for a set period of time. That doesnt sound very free; it actually sounds
kind of coerced. The free part is what you writeit can be whatever comes to mind.
Professional writers use free-writing to get started on a challenging (or distasteful)
writing task or to overcome writers block or a powerful urge to procrastinate. The
Most professors are perpetually frustrated with the one-and-done attitude that most students
bring to their work, and some sequences are specifically designed to force you to really rethink your
conclusions.
5

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idea is that if you just make yourself write, you cant help but produce some kind
of useful nugget. Thus, even if the first eight sentences of your free write are all
variations on I dont understand this or Id really rather be doing something
else, eventually youll write something like I guess the main point of this is
andbooyah!youre off and running. As an instructor, Ive found that asking
students to do a brief free-write right after I hand out an assignment generates
useful clarification questions. If your instructor doesnt make time for that in class,
a quick free-write on your own will quickly reveal whether you need clarification
about the assignment and, often, what questions to ask.

4. Ask for clarification the right way. Even the most skillfully crafted assignments may
need some verbal clarification, especially because students familiarity with the field
can vary enormously. Asking for clarification is a good thing. Be aware, though,
that instructors get frustrated when they perceive that students want to skip doing
their own thinking and instead receive an exact recipe for an A paper. Go ahead
and ask for clarification, but try to convey that you want to learn and youre ready
to work.

In general, avoid starting a question with Do we have to because I can guarantee that your instructor is thinking, You dont have to do crap. Youre an adult.
You chose college. You chose this class. Youre free to exercise your right to fail.
Similarly, avoid asking the professor about what he or she wants. Youre not performing some service for the professor when you write a paper. What they want
is for you to really think about the material.

Potentially annoying
questions

I dont get it. Can you explain


this more?
or

What do you want us to do?

Preferable alternatives
I see that we are comparing and contrasting these
two cases. What should be our focus? Their causes?
Their impacts? Their implications? All of those
things?
or

Im unfamiliar with how art historians analyze a


painting. Could you say more about what questions I
should have in mind to do this kind of analysis?
How many sources do we have
to cite?

Is there a typical range for the number of sources a


well written paper would cite for this assignment?
or

Could you say more about what the sources are for?
Is it more that were analyzing these texts in this
paper, or are we using these texts to analyze some
other case?

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Potentially annoying
questions

What do I have to do to get an


A on this paper?

Guptill

Preferable alternatives
Could I meet with you to get feedback on my
(pre-prepared) plans/outline/thesis/draft?
or

Im not sure how to approach this assignment. Are


there any good examples or resources you could
point me to?

Rubrics as road maps


If a professor provides a grading rubric with an assignment prompt, thank your lucky stars
(and your professor). If the professor took the trouble to prepare and distribute it, you
can be sure that he or she will use it to grade your paper. He or she may not go over it
in class, but its the clearest possible statement of what the professor is looking for in the
paper. If its wordy, it may seem like those online terms and conditions that we routinely
accept without reading. But you really should read it over carefully before you begin and
again as your work progresses. A lot of rubrics do have some useful specifics. Mine, for
example, often contain phrases like makes at least six error-free connections to concepts or
ideas from the course, or gives thorough consideration to at least one plausible counterargument. Even less specific criteria (such as incorporates course concepts and considers
counter-arguments) will tell you how you should be spending your writing time.

Even the best rubrics arent completely transparent. They simply cant be. Take, for example,
the AAC&U rubric discussed in Chapter 1. It has been drafted and repeatedly revised by a
multidisciplinary expert panel and tested multiple times on sample student work to ensure
reliability. But it is still seems kind of vague. What is the real difference between demonstrating a thorough understanding of context, audience, and purpose and demonstrating
adequate consideration of the same? It depends on the specific context. So how can you
know whether youve done that? A big part of what youre learning, through feedback from
your professors, is to judge the quality of your writing for yourself. Your future bosses are
counting on that. At this point, it is better to think of rubrics as roadmaps, displaying your
destination, rather than a GPS system directing every move you make.
Behind any rubric is the essential goal of higher education: helping you take charge of
your own learning, which means writing like an independently motivated scholar. Are you
tasked with proposing a research paper topic? Dont just tell the professor what you want
to do, convince him or her of the salience of your topic, as if you were a scholar seeking
grant money. Is it a reflection paper? Then outline both the insights youve gained and the
intriguing questions that remain, as a scholar would. Are you writing a thesis-driven analytical paper? Then apply the concepts youve learned to a new problem or situation. Write
as if your scholarly peers around the country are eagerly awaiting your unique insights.
Descriptors like thoroughness or mastery or detailed attention convey the vision of
student writers making the time and rigorous mental effort to offer something new to the
ongoing, multi-stranded academic conversation. What your professor wants, in short, is
critical thinking.
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Whats critical about critical thinking?


Critical thinking is one of those terms that has been used so often and in so many different
ways that if often seems meaningless. It also makes one wonder, is there such a thing as
uncritical thinking? If you arent thinking critically, then are you even thinking?
Despite the prevalent ambiguities, critical thinking actually does mean something. The
Association of American Colleges and Universities usefully defines it as a habit of mind
characterized by the comprehensive exploration of issues, ideas, artifacts, and events before
accepting or formulating an opinion or conclusion.6

That definition aligns with the best description of critical thinking I ever heard; it came
from my junior high art teacher, Joe Bolger.7 He once asked us, What color is the ceiling?
In that withering tween tone, we reluctantly replied, Whiiiite. He then asked, What
color is it really? We deigned to aim our pre-adolescent eyes upwards, and eventually began
to offer more accurate answers: Ivory? Yellow-ish tan. Its grey in that corner. After
finally getting a few thoughtful responses, Mr. Bolger said something like, Making good
art is about drawing what you see, not what you think youre supposed to see. The AAC&U
definition, above, essentially amounts to the same thing: taking a good look and deciding
what you really think rather than relying on the first idea or assumption that comes to mind.
The critical thinking rubric produced by the AAC&U describes the relevant activities of
critical thinking in more detail. To think critically, one must
(a) clearly state and comprehensively describe the issue or problem,
(b) independently interpret and evaluate sources,
(c) thoroughly analyze assumptions behind and context of your own or others
ideas,
(d) argue a complex position and one that takes counter-arguments into account,
and
(e) arrive at logical and well informed conclusions.8

While you are probably used to providing some evidence for your claims, you can see that
college-level expectations go quite a bit further. When professors assign an analytical paper,
they dont just want you to formulate a plausible-sounding argument. They want you to dig
into the evidence, think hard about unspoken assumptions and the influence of context,
and then explain what you really think and why.
Interestingly, the AAC&U defines critical thinking as a habit of mind rather than a discrete achievement. And there are at least two reasons to see critical thinking as a craft or art
to pursue rather than a task to check off. First, the more you think critically, the better you
get at it. As you get more and more practice in closely examining claims, their underlying
logic, and alternative perspectives on the issue, itll begin to feel automatic. Youll no longer
make or accept claims that begin with Everyone knows that or end with Thats just
Terrel Rhodes, ed., Assessing Outcomes and Improving Achievement: Tips and Tools for Using
Rubrics (Washington, DC: Association of American Colleges and Universities, 2010).
7
Thank you, Mr. Bolger!
8
Ibid.
6

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human nature. Second, just as artists and craftspersons hone their skills over a lifetime,
learners continually expand their critical thinking capacities, both through the feedback
they get from others and their own reflections. Artists of all kinds find satisfaction in continually seeking greater challenges. Continual reflection and improvement is part of the
craft.

As soon as I see the phrase critical thinking, the first thing I think is
more work. It always sounds as if youre going to have to think harder and
longer. But I think the AAC&Us definition is on point, critical thinking
is a habit. Seeing that phrase shouldnt be a scary thing because by this
point in many peoples college career this is an automatic response. I
never expect an answer to a question to be in the text; by now I realize that
my professors want to know what I have to say about something or what
I have learned. In a paper or essay, the three-step thesis process explained
in Chapter 3 is a tool that will help you get this information across. While
youre doing the hard work (the thinking part), this formula offers you a
way to clearly state your position on a subject. Its as simple as: make a
general statement, make an arguable statement, and finally, say why it
is important. This is my rule of thumb, and I would not want to start a
thesis-driven paper any other way!
Aly Button
Critical thinking is hard work. Even those who actively choose to do it experience it as
tedious, difficult, and sometimes surprisingly emotional. Nobel-prize winning psychologist
Daniel Kahneman explains that our brains arent designed to think; rather, theyre designed
to save us from having to think.9 Our brains are great at developing routines and repertoires
that enable us to accomplish fairly complex tasks like driving cars, choosing groceries, and
having a conversation without thinking consciously and thoroughly about every move we
make. Kahneman calls this fast thinking. Slow thinking, which is deliberate and painstaking, is something our brains seek to avoid. That built-in tendency can lead us astray.
Kahneman and his colleagues often used problems like this one in experiments to gauge
how people used fast and slow thinking in different contexts:10
A bat and ball cost $1.10.
The bat costs one dollar more than the ball.
How much does the ball cost?

Most people automatically say the ball costs $0.10. However, if the bat costs $1 more, than
the bat would cost $1.10 leading to the incorrect total of $1.20. The ball costs $0.05. Kahneman notes, Many thousands of university students have answered the bat-and-ball puzzle,
and the results are shocking. More than 50% of students at Harvard, MIT, and Princeton
gave the intuitiveincorrectanswer. These and other results confirm that many people
are overconfident, prone to place too much faith in their intuitions.11 Thinking critically
Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2011).
Ibid., 44.
11
Ibid., 45.
9

10

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thoroughly questioning your immediate intuitive responsesis difficult work, but every
organization and business in the world needs people who can do that effectively. Some
students assume that an unpleasant critical thinking experience means that theyre either
doing something wrong or that its an inherently uninteresting (and oppressive) activity.
While we all relish those times when were pleasantly absorbed in a complex activity (what
psychologist Mihaly Czikszentmihalyi calls flow12), the more tedious experiences can also
bring satisfaction, sort of like a good work-out.
Critical thinking can also be emotionally challenging, researchers have found. Facing a new
realm of uncertainty and contradiction without relying on familiar assumptions is inherently anxiety-provoking because when youre doing it, you are, by definition, incompetent.
Recent research has highlighted that both children and adults need to be able to regulate
their own emotions in order to cope with the challenges of building competence in a new
area.13 The kind of critical thinking your professors are looking forthat is, pursuing a
comprehensive, multi-faceted exploration in order to arrive at an arguable, nuanced argumentis inevitably a struggle and it may be an emotional one. Your best bet is to find ways
to make those processes as efficient, pleasant, and effective as you can.

The thing no one tells you when you get to college is that critical thinking
papers are professors favorites. College is all about learning how to think
individual thoughts so youll have to do quite a few of them. Have no fear
though; they do get easier with time. The first step? Think about what you
want to focus on in the paper (aka your thesis) and go with it.
Kaethe Leonard
As Chapter 1 explains, the demands students face are not at all unique to their academic
pursuits. Professional working roles demand critical thinking, as 81% of major employers
reported in an AAC&U-commissioned survey14, and its pretty easy to imagine how critical
thinking helps one make much better decisions in all aspects of life. Embrace it. And
just as athletes, artists, and writers sustain their energy and inspiration for hard work by
interacting with others who share these passions, look to others in the scholarly communityyour professors and fellow studentsto keep yourself engaged in these ongoing
intellectual challenges. While writing time is often solitary, its meant to plug you into a
vibrant academic community. What your professors want, overall, is for you to join them
in asking and pursuing important questions about the natural, social, and creative worlds.

Other resources
1. This website from the Capital Community College Foundation has some good
advice about overcoming writers block. And student contributor Aly Button recommends this funny clip from SpongeBob Squarepants.

Mihaly Czikszentmihalyi, Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience (New York: Harper &
Row, 1990).
13
Rosen, Jeffrey A., Elizabeth J. Glennie, Ben W. Dalton, Jean M. Lennon, and Robert N. Bozick.
Noncognitive Skills in the Classroom: New Perspectives on Educational Research. RTI International.
PO Box 12194, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709-2194, 2010.
14
Hart Research Associates, Raising the Bar, 9.
12

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2. The Foundation for Critical Thinking maintains a website with many useful articles
and tools.

3. The Online Writing Laboratory (OWL) at Purdue University is a wonderful set of


resources for every aspect of college writing. Especially germane to this chapter is
this summary of the most common types of writing assignments.
4. This website, BrainBashers.com offers logic puzzles and other brain-teasers for your
entertainment.

Exercises
1. Free-write on an assignment prompt. If you have one, do that one. If not, heres one
to practice with:
A. Please write a five-page paper analyzing the controversy surrounding genetically modified organisms (GMOs) in the food supply.

B. What clarification questions would you like to ask your professor? What additional background knowledge do you need to deeply understand the topic? What
are some starter ideas that could lead to a good thesis and intriguing argument?

2. Find a couple of sample student papers from online paper mills such as this one
(Google free college papers) and journals featuring excellent undergraduate
writing (such as this one from Cornell University), and use the AAC&U rubric on
critical thinking to evaluate them. Which descriptor in each row most closely fits
the paper?

What Does the Professor Want? Understanding the Assignment|18

Chapter 3

Constructing the Thesis and


ArgumentFrom the Ground
Up

Moving beyond the five-paragraph theme


As an instructor, Ive noted that a number of new (and sometimes not-so-new) students are
skilled wordsmiths and generally clear thinkers but are nevertheless stuck in a high-school
style of writing. They struggle to let go of certain assumptions about how an academic paper
should be. Chapter 1 points to the essay portion of the SAT as a representative artifact of the
writing skills that K-12 education imparts. Some students who have mastered that form,
and enjoyed a lot of success from doing so, assume that college writing is simply more of
the same. The skills that go into a very basic kind of essayoften called the five-paragraph
themeare indispensable. If youre good at the five-paragraph theme, then youre good at
identifying a clear and consistent thesis, arranging cohesive paragraphs, organizing evidence for key points, and situating an argument within a broader context through the intro
and conclusion.
In college you need to build on those essential skills. The five-paragraph theme, as such,
is bland and formulaic; it doesnt compel deep thinking. Your professors are looking for
a more ambitious and arguable thesis, a nuanced and compelling argument, and real-life
evidence for all key points, all in an organically1 structured paper.
Figures 3.1 and 3.2 contrast the standard five-paragraph theme and the organic college
paper. The five-paragraph theme, outlined in Figure 3.1 is probably what youre used to:
the introductory paragraph starts broad and gradually narrows to a thesis, which readers
expect to find at the very end of that paragraph. In this idealized format, the thesis invokes
the magic number of three: three reasons why a statement is true. Each of those reasons is
explained and justified in the three body paragraphs, and then the final paragraph restates
Organic here doesnt mean pesticide-free or containing carbon; it means the paper grows and
develops, sort of like a living thing.
1

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the thesis before gradually getting broader. This format is easy for readers to follow, and it
helps writers organize their points and the evidence that goes with them. Thats why you
learned this format.

Figure 3.2, in contrast, represents a paper on the same topic that has the more organic
form expected in college. The first key difference is the thesis. Rather than simply positing
a number of reasons to think that something is true, it puts forward an arguable statement: one with which a reasonable person might disagree. An arguable thesis gives the
paper purpose. It surprises readers and draws them in. You hope your reader thinks, Huh.
Why would they come to that conclusion? and then feels compelled to read on. The body
paragraphs, then, build on one another to carry out this ambitious argument. In the classic
five-paragraph theme (Figure 3.1) it hardly matters which of the three reasons you explain
first or second. In the more organic structure (Figure 3.2) each paragraph specifically leads
to the next.

Figure 3.1, The five-paragraph theme

The last key difference is seen in the conclusion. Because the organic essay is driven by an
ambitious, non-obvious argument, the reader comes to the concluding section thinking
OK, Im convinced by the argument. What do you, author, make of it? Why does it
matter? The conclusion of an organically structured paper has a real job to do. It doesnt
just reiterate the thesis; it explains why the thesis matters.

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Figure 3.2, The organic college paper

The substantial time you spent mastering the five-paragraph form in Figure 3.1 was time
well spent; its hard to imagine anyone succeeding with the more organic form without the
organizational skills and habits of mind inherent in the simpler form. But if you assume
that you must adhere rigidly to the simpler form, youre blunting your intellectual ambition.
Your professors will not be impressed by obvious theses, loosely related body paragraphs,
and repetitive conclusions. They want you to undertake an ambitious independent analysis,
one that will yield a thesis that is somewhat surprising and challenging to explain.

The three-story thesis: from the ground up


You have no doubt been drilled on the need for a thesis statement and its proper location
at the end of the introduction. And you also know that all of the key points of the paper
should clearly support the central driving thesis. Indeed, the whole model of the fiveparagraph theme hinges on a clearly stated and consistent thesis. However, some students
are surprisedand dismayedwhen some of their early college papers are criticized for
not having a good thesis. Their professor might even claim that the paper doesnt have a
thesis when, in the authors view it clearly does. So, what makes a good thesis in college?

1. A good thesis is non-obvious. High school teachers needed to make sure that you
and all your classmates mastered the basic form of the academic essay. Thus, they
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were mostly concerned that you had a clear and consistent thesis, even if it was
something obvious like sustainability is important. A thesis statement like that
has a wide-enough scope to incorporate several supporting points and concurring
evidence, enabling the writer to demonstrate his or her mastery of the five-paragraph form. Good enough! When they can, high school teachers nudge students
to develop arguments that are less obvious and more engaging. College instructors,
though, fully expect you to produce something more developed.

2. A good thesis is arguable. In everyday life, arguable is often used as a synonym for
doubtful. For a thesis, though, arguable means that its worth arguing: its something with which a reasonable person might disagree. This arguability criterion
dovetails with the non-obvious one: it shows that the author has deeply explored a
problem and arrived at an argument that legitimately needs 3, 5, 10, or 20 pages to
explain and justify. In that way, a good thesis sets an ambitious agenda for a paper.
A thesis like sustainability is important isnt at all difficult to argue for, and the
reader would have little intrinsic motivation to read the rest of the paper. However,
an arguable thesis like sustainability policies will inevitably fail if they do not
incorporate social justice, brings up some healthy skepticism. Thus, the arguable
thesis makes the reader want to keep reading.
3. A good thesis is well specified. Some student writers fear that theyre giving away
the game if they specify their thesis up front; they think that a purposefully vague
thesis might be more intriguing to the reader. However, consider movie trailers:
they always include the most exciting and poignant moments from the film to attract an audience. In academic papers, too, a well specified thesis indicates that the
author has thought rigorously about an issue and done thorough research, which
makes the reader want to keep reading. Dont just say that a particular policy is
effective or fair; say what makes it is so. If you want to argue that a particular claim
is dubious or incomplete, say why in your thesis.
4. A good thesis includes implications. Suppose your assignment is to write a paper about
some aspect of the history of linen production and trade, a topic that may seem
exceedingly arcane. And suppose you have constructed a well supported and creative argument that linen was so widely traded in the ancient Mediterranean that
it actually served as a kind of currency.2 Thats a strong, insightful, arguable, well
specified thesis. But which of these thesis statements do you find more engaging?

Version A:
Linen served as a form of currency in the ancient Mediterranean world, connecting
rival empires through circuits of trade.

Version B:
Linen served as a form of currency in the ancient Mediterranean world, connecting
rival empires through circuits of trade. The economic role of linen raises important
questions about how shifting environmental conditions can influence economic
relationships and, by extension, political conflicts.
For more see Fabio Lopez-Lazaro Linen. In Encyclopedia of World Trade from Ancient Times to
the Present. Armonk: M.E. Sharpe, 2005.
2

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Putting your claims in their broader context makes them more interesting to your reader
and more impressive to your professors who, after all, assign topics that they think have
enduring significance. Finding that significance for yourself makes the most of both your
paper and your learning.
How do you produce a good, strong thesis? And how do you know when youve gotten
there? Many instructors and writers find useful a metaphor based on this passage by Oliver
Wendell Holmes Sr.:3
There are one-story intellects, two-story intellects, and three-story intellects with
skylights. All fact collectors who have no aim beyond their facts are one-story
men. Two-story men compare, reason, generalize using the labor of fact collectors
as their own. Three-story men idealize, imagine, predicttheir best illumination
comes from above the skylight.

One-story theses state inarguable facts. Two-story theses bring in an arguable (interpretive
or analytical) point. Three-story theses nest that point within its larger, compelling implications. 4

The biggest benefit of the three-story metaphor is that it describes a process for building
a thesis. To build the first story, you first have to get familiar with the complex, relevant
facts surrounding the problem or question. You have to be able to describe the situation
thoroughly and accurately. Then, with that first story built, you can layer on the second story
by formulating the insightful, arguable point that animates the analysis. Thats often the
most effortful part: brainstorming, elaborating and comparing alternative ideas, finalizing
your point. With that specified, you can frame up the third story by articulating why the
point you make matters beyond its particular topic or case.

Thesis: thats the word that pops at me whenever I write an essay. Seeing
this word in the prompt scared me and made me think to myself, Oh
great, what are they really looking for? or How am I going to make a
thesis for a college paper? When rehearing that I would be focusing
on theses again in a class, I said to myself, Here we go again! But after
learning about the three story thesis, I never had a problem with writing
another thesis. In fact, I look forward to being asked on a paper to create
a thesis.
Timothe Pizarro
For example, imagine you have been assigned a paper about the impact of online learning
in higher education. You would first construct an account of the origins and multiple forms
of online learning and assess research findings about its use and effectiveness. If youve done
that well, youll probably come up with a well considered opinion that wouldnt be obvious
to readers who havent looked at the issue in depth. Maybe youll want to argue that online
Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr., The Poet at the Breakfast Table (New York: Houghton & Mifflin,
1892),
4
The metaphor is extraordinarily useful even though the passage is annoying. Beyond the sexist
language of the time, I dont appreciate the condescension toward fact-collectors. which reflects
a general modernist tendency to elevate the abstract and denigrate the concrete. In reality, datacollection is a creative and demanding craft, arguably more important than theorizing.
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learning is a threat to the academic community. Or perhaps youll want to make the case
that online learning opens up pathways to college degrees that traditional campus-based
learning does not. In the course of developing your central, argumentative point, youll
come to recognize its larger context; in this example, you may claim that online learning can
serve to better integrate higher education with the rest of society, as online learners bring
their educational and career experiences together. To outline this example:
First story: Online learning is becoming more prevalent and takes many different
forms.

Second story: While most observers see it as a transformation of higher education,


online learning is better thought of an extension of higher education in that it
reaches learners who arent disposed to participate in traditional campus-based
education.
Third story: Online learning appears to be a promising way to better integrate
higher education with other institutions in society, as online learners integrate their
educational experiences with the other realms of their life, promoting the freer flow
of ideas between the academy and the rest of society.

Heres another example of a three-story thesis:5

First story: Edith Wharton did not consider herself a modernist writer, and she
didnt write like her modernist contemporaries.
Second story: However, in her work we can see her grappling with both the questions and literary forms that fascinated modernist writers of her era. While not an
avowed modernist, she did engage with modernist themes and questions.

Third story: Thus, it is more revealing to think of modernism as a conversation


rather than a category or practice.

Heres one more example:

First story: Scientists disagree about the likely impact in the U.S. of the light brown
apple moth (LBAM), an agricultural pest native to Australia.

Second story: Research findings to date suggest that the decision to spray pheromones over the skies of several southern Californian counties to combat the LBAM
was poorly thought out.
Third story: Together, the scientific ambiguities and the controversial response
strengthen the claim that industrial-style approaches to pest management are inherently unsustainable.

A thesis statement that stops at the first story isnt usually considered a thesis. A two-story
thesis is usually considered competent, though some two-story theses are more intriguing
and ambitious than others. A thoughtfully crafted and well informed three-story thesis
puts the author on a smooth path toward an excellent paper.

Drawn from Jennifer Haytock, Edith Wharton and the Conversations of Literary Modernism (New
York: Palgrave-MacMillan, 2008).
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The concept of a three-story thesis framework was the most helpful piece
of information I gained from the writing component of DCC 100. The
first time I utilized it in a college paper, my professor included good
thesis and excellent introduction in her notes and graded it significantly higher than my previous papers. You can expect similar results if
you dig deeper to form three-story theses. More importantly, doing so
will make the actual writing of your paper more straightforward as well.
Arguing something specific makes the structure of your paper much
easier to design.
Peter Farrell

Three-story theses and the organically


structured argument
The three-story thesis is a beautiful thing. For one, it gives a paper authentic momentum.
The first paragraph doesnt just start with some broad, vague statement; every sentence is
crucial for setting up the thesis. The body paragraphs build on one another, moving through
each step of the logical chain. Each paragraph leads inevitably to the next, making the transitions from paragraph to paragraph feel wholly natural. The conclusion, instead of being a
mirror-image paraphrase of the introduction, builds out the third story by explaining the
broader implications of the argument. It offers new insight without departing from the flow
of the analysis.
I should note here that a paper with this kind of momentum often reads like it was knocked
out in one inspired sitting. But in reality, just like accomplished athletes and artists, masterful writers make the difficult thing look easy. As writer Anne Lamott notes, reading
a well written piece feels like its author sat down and typed it out, bounding along like
huskies across the snow. However, she continues,
This is just the fantasy of the uninitiated. I know some very great writers, writers
you love who write beautifully and have made a great deal of money, and not one
of them sits down routinely feeling wildly enthusiastic and confident. Not one of
them writes elegant first drafts. All right, one of them does, but we do not like her
very much.6

Experienced writers dont figure out what they want to say and then write it. They write in
order to figure out what they want to say.

Experienced writers develop theses in dialog with the body of the essay. An initial characterization of the problem leads to a tentative thesis, and then drafting the body of the
paper reveals thorny contradictions or critical areas of ambiguity, prompting the writer to
revisit or expand the body of evidence and then refine the thesis based on that fresh look.
The revised thesis may require that body paragraphs be reordered and reshaped to fit the
Anne Lamott, Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life (New York: Pantheon, 1994),
21.
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emerging three-story thesis. Throughout the process, the thesis serves as an anchor point
while the author wades through the morass of facts and ideas. The dialogue between thesis
and body continues until the author is satisfied or the due date arrives, whatever comes
first. Its an effortful and sometimes tedious process. Novice writers, in contrast, usually
oversimplify the writing process. They formulate some first-impression thesis, produce a
reasonably organized outline, and then flesh it out with text, never taking the time to reflect
or truly revise their work. They assume that revision is a step backward when, in reality, it
is a major step forward.

Everyone has a different way that they like to write. For instance, I like to
pop my earbuds in, blast dubstep music and write on a white board. I like
using the white board because it is a lot easier to revise and edit while you
write. After I finish writing a paragraph that I am completely satisfied
with on the white board, I sit in front of it with my laptop and just type
it up.
Kaethe Leonard
Another benefit of the three-story thesis framework is that it demystifies what a strong
argument is in academic culture. In an era of political polarization, many students may think
that a strong argument is based on a simple, bold, combative statement that is promoted
it in the most forceful way possible. Gun control is a travesty! Shakespeare is the best
writer who ever lived! When students are encouraged to consider contrasting perspectives
in their papers, they fear that doing so will make their own thesis seem mushy and weak.
However, in academics a strong argument is comprehensive and nuanced, not simple and
polemical. The purpose of the argument is to explain to readers why the authorthrough
the course of his or her in-depth studyhas arrived at a somewhat surprising point. On
that basis, it has to consider plausible counter-arguments and contradictory information.
Academic argumentation exemplifies the popular adage about all writing: show, dont tell.
In crafting and carrying out the three-story thesis, you are showing your reader the work
you have done.
The model of the organically structured paper and the three-story thesis framework explained here is the very foundation of the paper itself and the process that produces it. The
subsequent chapters, focusing on sources, paragraphs, and sentence-level wordsmithing, all
follow from the notion that you are writing to think and writing to learn as much as you
are writing to communicate. Your professors assume that you have the self-motivation and
organizational skills to pursue your analysis with both rigor and flexibility; that is, they
envision you developing, testing, refining and sometimes discarding your own ideas based
on a clear-eyed and open-minded assessment of the evidence before you.

Other resources
1. The Writing Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill offers
an excellent, readable run-down on the five-paragraph theme, why most college
writing assignments want you to go beyond it, and those times when the simpler
structure is actually a better choice.
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2. There are many useful websites that describe good thesis statements and provide
examples. Those from the writing centers at Hamilton College, Purdue University,
and Clarkson University are especially helpful.

Exercises
1. Find a scholarly article or book that is interesting to you. Focusing on the abstract
and introduction, outline the first, second, and third stories of its thesis.

2. Here is a list of one-story theses. Come up with two-story and three-story versions
of each one.
A. Television programming includes content that some find objectionable.

B. The percent of children and youth who are overweight or obese has risen in
recent decades.

C. First-year college students must learn how to independently manage their time.
D. The things we surround ourselves with symbolize who we are.

3. Find an example of a five-paragraph theme (online essay mills, your own high
school work), produce an alternative three-story thesis, and outline an organically
structured paper to carry that thesis out.

4. Go to the SAT website about the essay exam, choose one of the highly rated sample
essays. In structure, how does it compare to the five-paragraph theme? How does
it compare to the organic college essay? Use the SAT essay example you found to
create alternative examples for Figures 3.1 and 3.2.

Constructing the Thesis and ArgumentFrom the Ground Up|27

Chapter 4

Secondary Sources in Their


Natural Habitats

Ah, the research paper


Such exhilaration! Such consternation! Educators are fond of research papers because they
require you to find your own sources, confront conflicting evidence, and synthesize diverse
information and ideasall skills required in any professional leadership role. Research
papers also allow students to pursue their own topic of interest; your professors have to
assume that you are genuinely interested in at least some major part of the course.1 The
open-endedness of research papers sets you up to do your best work as a self-motivated
scholar.

Research papers are, by far, the best kind of papers! If you have an original
twist to an old idea and about five good sources, you pretty much have a
research paper. Most of the hard work is done for you already! If I can
give you one piece of advice for research papers, it would be to know what
youre looking for in an article. If you want statistics, skim for statistics.
Knowing what you want will cut down the time it takes you to find sources.
Kaethe Leonard
This chapter is about secondary sources: what they are, where to find them, and how to
choose them.2 Recall the distinction between primary and secondary sources. Primary
sources are original documents, data, or images: the law code of the Le Dynasty in Vietnam,
the letters of Kurt Vonnegut, data gathered from an experiment on color perception, an in If you arent actually interested in anything relating to the course, youd do well to keep that
information to yourself.
2
Obviously, not all writing assignments require you to find and use secondary sources. This
chapter is relevant to those that do.
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terview, or Farm Service Administration photographs from the 1930s.3 Secondary sources
are produced by analyzing primary sources. They include news articles, scholarly articles,
reviews of films or art exhibitions, documentary films, and other pieces that have some
descriptive or analytical purpose. Some things may be primary sources in one context but
secondary sources in another. For example, if youre using news articles to inform an analysis
of a historical event, theyre serving as secondary sources. If youre counting the number of
times a particular newspaper reported on different types of events, then the news articles
are serving as primary sources because theyre more akin to raw data.

Some sources are better than others


You probably know by now that if you cite Wikipedia as an authoritative source, the wrath
of your professor shall be visited upon you. Why is it that even the most informative Wikipedia articles are still often considered illegitimate? And what are good sources to use?
The table below summarizes types of secondary sources in four tiers. All sources have their
legitimate uses, but the top-tier ones are preferable for citation.

Tier

Type

Content

Peer-reviewed Rigorous
academic
research and
publications
analysis

Reports,
articles, and
books from
credible
non-academic
sources

Well researched
and evenhanded
descriptions of
an event or state
of the world

Short
pieces from
newspapers
or credible
websites
Agendadriven or
uncertain
pieces

Simple
reporting of
events, research
findings, or
policy changes
Mostly opinion,
varying in
thoughtfulness
and credibility

Uses

Provide strong
evidence for claims
and references to
other high-quality
sources
Initial research on
events or trends not
yet analyzed in the
academic literature;
may reference
important Tier 1
sources
Often point to useful
Tier 2 or Tier 1
sources, may provide
a factoid or two not
found anywhere else
May represent a
particular position
within a debate;
more often provide
keywords and clues
about higher quality
sources

How to find them

Google Scholar,
library catalogs, and
academic article
databases

Websites of relevant
agencies, Google
searches using (site:
*.gov or site: *.org),
academic article
databases
Strategic Google
searches or article
databases including
newspapers and
magazines
Non-specific Google
searches

Bored? Browse these images and other collections of the Library of Congress American
Memory Project: memory.loc.gov. Fascinating!
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Tier 1: Peer-reviewed academic publications

These are sources from the mainstream academic literature: books and scholarly articles.
Academic books generally fall into three categories: (1) textbooks written with students in
mind, (2) monographs which give an extended report on a large research project, and (3)
edited volumes in which each chapter is authored by different people. Scholarly articles
appear in academic journals, which are published multiple times a year in order to share the
latest research findings with scholars in the field. Theyre usually sponsored by some academic society. To get published, these articles and books had to earn favorable anonymous
evaluations by qualified scholars. Who are the experts writing, reviewing, and editing these
scholarly publications? Your professors. I describe this process below. Learning how to read
and use these sources is a fundamental part of being a college student.

Tier 2: Reports, articles and books from credible non-academic


sources

Some events and trends are too recent to appear in Tier 1 sources. Also, Tier 1 sources tend
to be highly specific, and sometimes you need a more general perspective on a topic. Thus,
Tier 2 sources can provide quality information that is more accessible to non-academics.
There are three main categories. First, official reports from government agencies or major
international institutions like the World Bank or the United Nations; these institutions
generally have research departments staffed with qualified experts who seek to provide
rigorous, even-handed information to decision-makers. Second, feature articles from major
newspapers and magazines like the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, London Times,
or The Economist are based on original reporting by experienced journalists (not press
releases) and are typically 1500+ words in length. Third, there are some great books from
non-academic presses that cite their sources; theyre often written by journalists. All three
of these sources are generally well researched descriptions of an event or state of the world,
undertaken by credentialed experts who generally seek to be even-handed. It is still up to
you to judge their credibility. Your instructors and campus librarians can advise you on
which sources in this category have the most credibility.

Tier 3. Short pieces from periodicals or credible websites

A step below the well-developed reports and feature articles that make up Tier 2 are the
short tidbits that one finds in newspapers and magazines or credible websites. How short
is a short news article? Usually, theyre just a couple paragraphs or less, and theyre often
reporting on just one thing: an event, an interesting research finding, or a policy change.
They dont take extensive research and analysis to write, and many just summarize a press
release written and distributed by an organization or business. They may describe things
like corporate mergers, newly discovered diet-health links, or important school-funding
legislation. You may want to cite Tier 3 sources in your paper if they provide an important
factoid or two that isnt provided by a higher-tier piece, but if the Tier 3 article describes
a particular study or academic expert, your best bet is to find the journal article or book
it is reporting on and use that Tier 1 source instead. If the article mentions which journal
the study was published in, you can go right to that journal through your library website.
Sometimes you can find the original journal article by putting the scholars name and some
keywords into Google Scholar.

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What counts as a credible website in this tier? You may need some guidance from instructors or librarians, but you can learn a lot by examining the person or organization providing
the information (look for an About link). For example, if the organization is clearly
agenda-driven or not up-front about its aims and/or funding sources, then it definitely isnt
something you want to cite as a neutral authority. Also look for signs of expertise. A tidbit
about a medical research finding written by someone with a science background carries
more weight than the same topic written by a policy analyst. These sources are sometimes
uncertain, which is all the more reason to follow the trail to a Tier 1 or Tier 2 source
whenever possible.

Personally, research papers are my thing! They give me a chance to further


explore a topic that I usually am genuinely interested in, and it gives me
the opportunity to write down everything I know. Sources are easy to
find; theyre everywhere. Unfortunately, the useful ones you have to put
in a little more effort to find. As much as I love Wikipedia, if Im going to
take the time to write a paper, I want it to be taken seriously. There are so
many resources out there to help students find scholarly information. The
better the source, the more supported your paper will be. But it doesnt
matter how well supported or amazing your paper is if you dont cite your
sources! A citing mistake could definitely get you a big fat zero on the
paper you worked so hard on, and maybe even kicked out of school. Utilize resources like www.easybib.com for a quick works cited, and Purdues
OWL (english.purdue.edu/owl) for a complete and easy explanation on
APA and MLA citing formats.
Aly Button

Tier 4. Agenda-driven or pieces from unknown sources

This tier is essentially everything else, including Wikipedia.4 These types of sourcesespecially Wikipediacan be hugely helpful in identifying interesting topics, positions within a
debate, keywords to search on, and, sometimes, higher-tier sources on the topic. They often
play a critically important role in the early part of the research process, but they generally
arent (and shouldnt be) cited in the final paper. Throwing some keywords into Google and
seeing what you get is a fine way to get started, but dont stop there. Start a list of the people,
organizations, sources, and keywords that seem most relevant to your topic. For example,
suppose youve been assigned a research paper about the impact of linen production and
trade on the ancient world. A quick Google search reveals that (1) linen comes from the
flax plant, (2) the scientific name for flax is Linum usitatissimum, (3) Egypt dominated
linen production at the height of its empire, and (4) Alex J. Warden published a book about
ancient linen trade in 1867. Similarly, you found some useful search terms to try instead
of ancient world (antiquity, Egyptian empire, ancient Egypt, ancient Mediterranean) and
some generalizations for linen (fabric, textiles, or weaving). Now youve got a lot to work
with as you tap into the library catalog and academic article databases.
Wikipedia is a conundrum. There are a lot of excellent articles on there, and I, like many other
professors, embrace the open-access values that embody things like Wikipedia and this very
textbook. Its not that Wikipedia is crap; its just that there are much more solid alternatives.
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Origins and anatomy of a journal article


Most of the Tier 1 sources available are academic articles, also called scholarly articles,
scholarly papers, journal articles, academic papers, or peer-reviewed articles. They all mean
the same thing: a paper published in an academic periodical after being scrutinized anonymously and judged to be sound by other experts in the subfield. Their origin explains both
their basic structure and the high esteem they have in the eyes of your professors.

Many journals are sponsored by academic associations. Most of your professors belong to
some big, general one (such as the Modern Language Association5, the American Psychological Association6, the National Association for Sport and Physical Education, or the
American Physical Society) and one or more smaller ones organized around particular
areas of interest and expertise (such as the Association for the Study of Food and Society,
the International Association for Statistical Computing, or the Slavic and East European
Folklore Association). There are also generalist organizations organized by region of the
country or state, such as the Eastern Sociological Society or the Southern Management
Association. Each of these associations exists to promote the exchange of research findings
and collaboration in their disciplines. Towards this end, they organize conferences, sponsor
working groups, and publish one or more academic journals. These journals are meant to
both publicize and archive the most interesting and important findings of the field.
Academic papers are essentially reports that scholars write to their peerspresent and
futureabout what theyve done in their research, what theyve found, and why they think
its important. Thus, in a lot of fields they often have a structure reminiscent of the lab
reports youve written for science classes:
1. Abstract: A one-paragraph summary of the article: its purpose, methods, findings,
and significance.
2. Introduction: An overview of the key question or problem that the paper
addresses, why it is important, and the key conclusion(s) (i.e., thesis or theses) of
the paper.

3. Literature review: A synthesis of all the relevant prior research (the so-called academic literature on the subject) that explains why the paper makes an original and
important contribution to the body of knowledge.

4. Data and methods: An explanation of what data or information the author(s) used
and what they did with it.
5. Results: A full explanation of the key findings of the study.

6. Conclusion/discussion: Puts the key findings or insights from the paper into their
broader context; explains why they matter.
Not all papers are so sciencey. For example, a historical or literary analysis doesnt necessarily have a data and methods section; but they do explain and justify the research
question, describe how the authors own points relate to those made in other relevant
articles and books, develop the key insights yielded by the analysis, and conclude by explaining their significance. Some academic papers are review articles, in which the data
are published papers and the findings are key insights, enduring lines of debate, and/or
remaining unanswered questions.
Where MLA citation style comes from.
Where APA citation style comes from.

5
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Scholarly journals use a peer-review process to decide which articles merit publication.
First, hopeful authors send their article manuscript to the journal editor, a role filled by
some prominent scholar in the field. The editor reads over the manuscript and decides
whether it seems worthy of peer-review. If its outside the interests of the journal or is
clearly inadequate, the editor will reject it outright. If it looks appropriate and sufficiently
high quality, the editor will recruit a few other experts in the field to act as anonymous peer
reviewers. The editor will send the manuscript (scrubbed of identifying information) to the
reviewers who will read it closely and provide a thorough critique. Is the research question
driving the paper timely and important? Does the paper sufficiently and accurately review
all of the relevant prior research? Are the information sources believable and the research
methods rigorous? Are the stated results fully justified by the findings? Is the significance
of the research clear? Is it well written? Overall, does the paper add new, trustworthy, and
important knowledge to the field? Reviewers send their comments to the editor who then
decides whether to (1) reject the manuscript, (2) ask the author(s) to revise and resubmit the
manuscript7, or (3) accept it for publication. Editors send the reviewers comments (again,
with no identifying information) to authors along with their decisions. A manuscript that
has been revised and resubmitted usually goes out for peer-review again; editors often try
to get reviews from one or two first-round reviewers as well as a new reviewer. The whole
process, from start to finish, can easily take a year, and it is often another year before the
paper appears in print.
Understanding the academic publication process and the structure of scholarly articles tells
you a lot about how to find, read and use these sources:
1. Find them quickly. Instead of paging through mountains of dubious web content, go
right to the relevant scholarly article databases in order to quickly find the highest
quality sources.

2. Use the abstracts. Abstracts tell you immediately whether or not the article youre
holding is relevant or useful to the paper youre assigned to write. You shouldnt
ever have the experience of reading the whole paper just to discover its not useful.
3. Read strategically. Knowing the anatomy of a scholarly article tells you what you
should be reading for in each section. For example, you dont necessarily need to
understand every nuance of the literature review. You can just focus on why the
authors claim that their own study is distinct from the ones that came before.
4. Dont sweat the technical stuff. Not every social scientist understands the intricacies
of log-linear modeling of quantitative survey data; however, the reviewers definitely
do, and they found the analysis to be well constructed. Thus, you can accept the
findings as legitimate and just focus on the passages that explain the findings and
their significance in plainer language.

5. Use one article to find others. If you have one really good article thats a few years
old, you can use article databases to find newer articles that cited it in their own
literature reviews. That immediately tells you which ones are on the same topic
and offer newer findings. On the other hand, if your first source is very recent, the
literature review section will describe the other papers in the same line of research.
You can look them up directly.
From an authors perspective, a verdict of revise and resubmitcolloquially called an R &
Ris a cause for celebration. In many fields, most papers are revised and resubmitted at least once
before being published.
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Research papers, amongst others, are the most common papers a college
student will ever write, and as difficult as it may sound, it is not impossible to complete. Research papers are my favorite kind of papers because
of sourcing, paraphrasing, and quoting. Naturally as you would in other
papers, your own paper should come from yourself, but when you are
proving a point about a specific area of your topic, it is always ok to have a
credible source explain further. In college, sources are very important for
most, if not all papers you will have, and citing those sources is important
as well. After you are able to familiarize yourself with citations, it will
come natural like it has for many students.
Timothe Pizarro
Students sometimes grumble when theyre ordered to use scholarly articles in their research.
It seems a lot easier to just Google some terms and find stuff that way. However, academic
articles are the most efficient resource out there. They are vetted by experts and structured
specifically to help readers zero in on the most important passages.

Finding Tier 1 sources: article databases


Your campus library pays big money to subscribe to databases for Tier 1 articles. Some are
general purpose databases that include the most prominent journals across disciplines8,
and some are specific to a particular discipline.9 Often they have the full-text of the articles
right there for you to save or print. We wont go over particular databases here because
every campus has different offerings. If you havent already attended a workshop on using
the resources provided by your library, you should. A one-hour workshop will save you
many, many hours in the future. If there arent any workshops, you can always seek advice
from librarians and other library staff on the best databases for your topic. Many libraries
also have online research guides that point you to the best databases for the specific discipline and, perhaps, the specific course. Librarians are eager to help you succeed with your
researchits their job and they love it!so dont be shy about asking.
An increasingly popular article database is Google Scholar. It looks like a regular Google
search, and it aspires to include the vast majority of published scholarship. Google doesnt
share a list of which journals they include or how Google Scholar works, which limits its
utility for scholars. Also, because its so wide-ranging, it can be harder to find the most
appropriate sources. However, if you want to cast a wide net, its a very useful tool.
Here are three tips for using Google Scholar effectively:

1. Add your field (economics, psychology, French, etc.) as one of your keywords. If you just
put in crime, for example, Google Scholar will return all sorts of stuff from so-

Examples include Academic Search Premier (by EBSCO), Academic Search Complete (by
EBSCO), Academic OneFile (by Cengage), General OneFile (by Cengage), ArticleFirst (by
OCLC), and JSTOR (by ITHAKA).
9
Some examples: PsycINFO (for psychology), CINAHL (for nursing), Environment Complete
(for environmental science), Historical Abstracts (for history).
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ciology, psychology, geography, and history. If your paper is on crime in French


literature, your best sources may be buried under thousands of papers from other
disciplines. A set of search terms like crime French literature modern will get you
to relevant sources much faster.

2. Dont ever pay for an article. When you click on links to articles in Google Scholar,
you may end up on a publishers site that tells you that you can download the article
for $20 or $30. Dont do it! You probably have access to virtually all the published
academic literature through your library resources. Write down the key information (authors names, title, journal title, volume, issue number, year, page numbers)
and go find the article through your library website. If you dont have immediate
full-text access, you may be able to get it through inter-library loan.
3. Use the cited by feature. If you get one great hit on Google Scholar, you can quickly
see a list of other papers that cited it. For example, the search terms crime economics yielded this hit for a 1988 paper that appeared in a journal called Kyklos:

The economics of crime deterrence: a survey of theory and evidence

S Cameron - Kyklos, 1988 - Wiley Online Library


Since BECKER [19681 economists have generatec, a large literature on crime. Deterrence
effects have figured prominently; few papers [eg HOCH, 19741 omit consideration of these.
There are two reasons why a survey of the economics of deterrence is timely. Firstly, there ...
Cited by 392 Related articles All 5 versions Cite Save

Figure 4.1, Google Scholar

1988 is nearly 30 years ago; for a social-science paper you probably want more recent
sources. You can see that, according to Google, this paper was cited by 392 other sources.
You can click on that Cited by 392 to see that list. You can even search within that list of
392 if youre trying to narrow down the topic. For example, you could search on the term
cities to see which of those 392 articles are most likely to be about the economic impact
of crime on cities.

Library research as problem-solving


Youll probably engage the subscription article databases at different points in the process.
For example, imagine youve been assigned a research paper that can focus on any topic
relevant to the course. Imagine further that you dont have a clue about where to start and
arent entirely sure what counts as an appropriate topic in this discipline. A great approach
is to find the top journals in the specific field of your course and browse through recent
issues to see what people are publishing on. For example, when I assign an open-topic
research paper in my Introduction to Sociology course, I suggest that students looking
for a topic browse recent issues of Social Problems or American Journal of Sociology and find
an article that looks interesting. Theyll have a topic andbooyah!their first source. An
instructor of a class on kinesiology might recommend browsing Human Movement Science,
the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, or Perceptual and Motor Skills.
When you have a topic and are looking for a set of sources, your biggest challenge is finding
the right keywords. Youll never find the right sources without them. Youll obviously start
with words and phrases from the assignment prompt, but you cant stop there. As explained
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above, lower tier sources (such as Wikipedia) or the top-tier sources you already have are
great for identifying alternative keywords, and librarians and other library staff are also
well practiced at finding new approaches to try. Librarians can also point you to the best
databases for your topic as well.

As you assess your evidence and further develop your thesis through the writing process,
you may need to seek additional sources. For example, imagine youre writing a paper about
the added risks adolescents face when they have experienced their parents divorce. As
you synthesize the evidence about negative impacts, you begin to wonder if scholars have
documented some positive impacts as well.10 Thus you delve back into the literature to
look for more articles, find some more concepts and keywords (such as resiliency), assess
new evidence, and revise your thinking to account for these broader perspectives. Your
instructor may have asked you to turn in a bibliography weeks before the final paper draft.
You can check with your professor, but he or she is probably perfectly fine with you seeking
additional sources as your thinking evolves. Thats how scholars write.
Finding good sources is a much more creative task than it seems on the face of it. Its an
extended problem-solving exercise, an iterative cycle of questions and answers. Go ahead
and use Wikipedia to get broadly informed if you want. It wont corrupt your brain. But
use it, and all other sources, strategically. You should eventually arrive at a core set of Tier 1
sources that will enable you to make a well informed and thoughtful argument in support
of your thesis. Its also a good sign when you find yourself deciding that some of the first
sources you found are no longer relevant to your thesis; that likely means that you have
revised and specified your thinking and are well on your way to constructing the kind of
self-driven in-depth analysis that your professor is looking for.

Other resources
1. The Online Writing Laboratory (OWL) at Purdue University provides this list of
links to freely available article databases.
2. Google provides some great tips for getting the most out of Google Scholar.

3. This resource from Bowling Green State University explains how searching subject
headings in a database (compared to key words) can more quickly bring you to
relevant sources.

Exercises
1. Choose a research topic, enter it into Google and then into Google Scholar, and
compare your results. Some topics you could try: college athletes and academics,
antibiotic resistance, Ptolemaic dynasty.
2. Using various databases, find one source in each of the four tiers for a particular
topic.

3. Enter a topic into a general subscription database that has both scholarly and
non-scholarly sources (such as Academic Search Complete or Academic OneFile);
One fairly recent article is Ilana Sever, Joseph Gutmann, and Amnon Lazar, Positive
Consequences of Parental Divorce Among Israeli Young Adults, Marriage and Family Review 42, no. 4
(2007): 7-28.
10

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browse the first few hits and classify each one as scholarly or not-scholarly. Look at
the structure of the piece to make your determination.

Secondary Sources in Their Natural Habitats|37

Chapter 5

Listening to Sources, Talking


to Sources

Theses and sources


Everyone knows that a thorough analysis and persuasive argument needs strong evidence.
The credibility of sources, addressed in Chapter 4, is one key element of strong evidence,
but it also matters how sources are used in the text of the paper. Many students are accustomed to thinking of sources simply as expert corroboration for their own points. As a
result, they tend to comb texts to find statements that closely parallel what they want to say
and then incorporate quotes as evidence that a published author agrees with them. Thats
one way to use sources, but there is a lot more to it.

Recall from prior chapters that writing academic papers is about joining a conversation.
Youre contributing your own original thinking to some complex problem, be it interpretive, theoretical, or practical. Citing sources helps situate your ideas within that ongoing
conversation. Sometimes youre citing a research finding that provides strong evidence for
your point; at other times youre summarizing someone elses ideas in order to explain how
your own opinion differs or to note how someone elses concept applies to a new situation.
Graff and Birkenstein1 encourage you to think about writing with sources is a They Say/I
Say process. You first report what they say; they being published authors, prevalent
ideas in society at large, or maybe participants in some kind of political or social debate.
Then you respond by explaining what you think: Do you agree? Disagree? A little of both?

This They Say/I Say approach can help student writers find balance in their use of sources.
On one extreme, some students think that they arent allowed to make any claims without
citing one or more expert authors saying the same thing. When their instructors encourage
them to bring more original thinking into their writing, theyre confused about how to
do it. On the other extreme, some students tend to describe, more or less accurately, what
sources say about a topic but then go on to state opinions that seem unrelated to the claims
they just summarized. For example, a student writer may draw on expert sources to explain
Gerald Graff and Cathy Birkenstein, They Say/I Say: The Moves That Matter in Academic Writing,
(New York: W.W. Norton & Co, 2009).
1

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how the prevention and early detection of cancer has saved lives2 but then argue for more
funding for curing advanced cancer without making any explicit link to the points about
prevention and screening. On one extreme, the sources are allowed to crowd out original
thinking; on the other, they have seemingly no impact on the authors conclusions.
How can you know when youre avoiding both of these extremes? In other words, what
kinds of theses (I Say) can count as an original claim and still be grounded in the sources
(They Say)? Here are five common strategies:

1. Combine research findings from multiple sources to make a larger summary argument.
You might find that none of the sources youre working with specifically claim that
early 20th century British literature was preoccupied with changing gender roles
but that, together, their findings all point to that broader conclusion.

2. Combine research findings from multiple sources to make a claim about their implications.
You might review papers that explore various factors shaping voting behavior to
argue that a particular voting-reform proposal will likely have positive impacts.
3. Identify underlying areas of agreement. You may argue that the literature on cancer
and the literature on violence both describe the unrecognized importance of prevention and early intervention in order to claim that insights about one set of
problems may be useful for the other.

4. Identify underlying areas of disagreement. You may find that the controversies surrounding educational reformand its debates about accountability, curricula,
school fundingultimately stem from different assumptions about the role of
schools in society.
5. Identify unanswered questions. Perhaps you review studies of the genetic and behavioral contributors to diabetes in order to highlight unknown factors and argue for
more in-depth research on the role of the environment.

There are certainly other ways authors use sources to build theses, but these examples illustrate how original thinking in academic writing involves making connections with and
between a strategically chosen set of sources.

Incorporating sources
Heres a passage of academic writing (an excerpt, not a complete paper) that illustrates
several ways that sources can figure into a They Say/I Say approach3:
Willingham (2011) draws on cognitive science to explain that students must be
able to regulate their emotions in order to learn. Emotional self-regulation enables
Recommended read: Siddhartha Mukherjees The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer
(New York, Scribner, 2010).
3
The sources cited in this example: Daniel T. Willingham, Can teachers increase students self
control? American Educator 35, no. 2 (2011): 22-27. Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow. Suzanne
Perkins and Sandra Graham-Bermann, Violence exposure and the development of school-related
functioning: mental health, neurocognition, and learning, Aggression and Violent Behavior 17, no.
1(2012): 89-98. David William Putwain and Natalie Best, Fear appeals in the primary classroom:
Effects on test anxiety and test grade, Learning and Individual Differences 21, no. 5 (2011): 580584.
2

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students to ignore distractions and channel their attention and behaviors in appropriate ways. Other research findings confirm that anxiety interferes with learning
and academic performance because it makes distractions harder to resist (Perkins
and Graham-Bermann, 2012; Putwain and Best, 2011).
Other cognitive scientists point out that deep learning is itself stressful because it
requires people to think hard about complex, unfamiliar material instead of relying
on cognitive short-cuts. Kahneman (2011) describes this difference in terms of two
systems for thinking: one fast and one slow. Fast thinking is based on assumptions
and habits and doesnt require a lot of effort. For example, driving a familiar route or
a routine grocery-shopping trip are not usually intellectually taxing activities. Slow
thinking, on the other hand, is what we do when we encounter novel problems and
situations. Its effortful, and it usually feels tedious and confusing. It is emotionally
challenging as well because we are, by definition, incompetent while were doing it,
which provokes some anxiety. Solving a tough problem is rewarding, but the path
itself is often unpleasant.
These insights from cognitive science enable us to critically assess the claims made
on both sides of the education reform debate. On one hand, they cast doubt on the
claims of education reformers that measuring teachers performance by student test
scores is the best way to improve education. For example, the Center for Education
Reform promotes the implementation of strong, data-driven, performance-based
accountability systems that ensure teachers are rewarded, retained and advanced
based on how they perform in adding value to the students who they teach, measured predominantly by student achievement (http://www.edreform.com/issues/
teacher-quality/#what-we-believe). The research that Willingham (2011) and
Kahneman (2011) describe suggests that frequent high-stakes testing may actually
work against learning by introducing greater anxiety into the school environment.
At the same time, opponents of education reform should acknowledge that these
research findings should prompt us to take a fresh look at how we educate our
children. While Stan Karp of Rethinking Schools is correct when he argues
that data-driven formulas [based on standardized testing] lack both statistical
credibility and a basic understanding of the human motivations and relationships that make good schooling possible (http://www.rethinkingschools.org/
archive/26_03/26_03_karp.shtm), it doesnt necessarily follow that all education
reform proposals lack merit. Challenging standards, together with specific training
in emotional self-regulation, will likely enable more students to succeed. 4

In that example, the ideas of Willingham and Kahneman are summarized approvingly,
bolstered with additional research findings, and then applied to a new realm: the current
debate surrounding education reform. Voices in that debate were portrayed as accurately as
possible, sometimes with representative quotes. Most importantly, all references were tied
directly to the authors own interpretative point, which relies on the quoted claims.
A side note: You may have noticed that the verbs used in referencing tend to be in present tense:
so-and-so writes or claims or argues. Thats what academic writers do, even if the piece and
author are from far in the past. Its called the historical present and its just one convention of
academic writing.
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I think the most important lesson for me to learn about sources was that
the best way to use them is to create a new point. What I mean by this
is instead of using them only to back up your points, create your own
conclusion from what your sources say. As a psychology major, I look at a
lot of data from researchers who have created a conclusion from a metaanalysis (a combination of many studies about the same thing). So thats
how I like to think of using sources, I will look at many articles about the
same subject and then come up with my own opinion. After using your
sources, it is very important to cite them correctly. Personally, I want to be
a respected and trustworthy scholar. However, if any of my papers were
to be found without proper citations, all of my hard work would be for
nothing and people would be wary about the rest of my work.
Aly Button
As you can see, there are times when you should quote or paraphrase sources that you dont
agree with or do not find particularly compelling. They may convey ideas and opinions
that help explain and justify your own argument. Similarly, when you cite sources that you
agree with, you should choose quotes or paraphrases that serve as building blocks within
your own argument. Regardless of the role each source plays in your writing, you certainly
dont need to find whole sentences or passages that express your thinking. Rather, focus on
what each of those sources is claiming, why, and how exactly their claims relate to your own
points.
The remainder of this chapter explains some key principles for incorporating sources, principles which follow from the general point that academic writing is about entering an
ongoing conversation.

Principle 1: Listen to your sources


Have you ever had the maddening experience of arguing with someone who twisted your
words to make it seem like you were saying something you werent? Novice writers sometimes inadvertently misrepresent their sources when they quote very minor points from an
article or even positions that the authors of an article disagree with. It often happens when
students approach their sources with the goal of finding snippets that align with their own
opinion. For example, the passage above contains the phrase measuring teachers performance by student test scores is the best way to improve education. An inexperienced writer
might include that quote in a paper without making it clear that the author(s) of the source
actually dispute that very claim. Doing so is not intentionally fraudulent, but it reveals that
the paper-writer isnt really thinking about and responding to claims and arguments made
by others. In that way, it harms his or her credibility.

Academic journal articles are especially likely to be misrepresented by student writers because their literature review sections often summarize a number of contrasting viewpoints.
For example, sociologists Jennifer C. Lee and Jeremy Staff wrote a paper in which they note

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that high-schoolers who spend more hours at a job are more likely to drop out of school.5
However, Lee and Staff s analysis finds that working more hours doesnt actually make a
student more likely to drop out. Instead, the students who express less interest in school are
both more likely to work a lot of hours and more likely to drop out. In short, Lee and Staff
argue that disaffection with school causes students to drop-out, not working at a job. In reviewing prior research about the impact of work on dropping out, Lee and Staff write Paid
work, especially when it is considered intensive, reduces grade point averages, time spent on
homework, educational aspirations, and the likelihood of completing high school6. If you
included that quote without explaining how it fits into Lee and Staff s actual argument, you
would be misrepresenting that source.

Principle 2: Provide context


Another error beginners often make is to drop in a quote without any context. If you simply
quote, Students begin preschool with a set of self-regulation skills that are a product of
their genetic inheritance and their family environment (Willingham, 2011, p.24), your
reader is left wondering who Willingham is, why he or she is included here, and where this
statement fits into his or her larger work. The whole point of incorporating sources is to
situate your own insights in the conversation. As part of that, you should provide some kind
of context the first time you use that source. Some examples:
Willingham, a cognitive scientist, claims that
Research in cognitive science has found that (Willingham, 2011).
Willingham argues that Students begin preschool with a set of self-regulation
skills that are a product of their genetic inheritance and their family environment
(Willingham, 2011, p.24). Drawing on findings in cognitive science, he explains

As the second example above shows, providing a context doesnt mean writing a brief biography of every author in your bibliographyit just means including some signal about why
that source is included in your text.

Even more baffling to your reader is when quoted material does not fit into the flow of the
text. For example, a novice student might write,
Schools and parents shouldnt set limits on how much teenagers are allowed to
work at jobs. We conclude that intensive work does not affect the likelihood of
high school dropout among youths who have a high propensity to spend long
hours on the job (Lee and Staff, 2007, p. 171). Teens should be trusted to learn
how to manage their time.

The reader is thinking, who is this sudden, ghostly we? Why should this source be believed? If you find that passages with quotes in your draft are awkward to read out loud,
thats a sign that you need to contextualize the quote more effectively. Heres a version that
puts the quote in context:
Jennifer C. Lee, J.C. and Jeremy Staff, When Work Matters: The Varying Impact of Work
Intensity on High School Drop Out, Sociology of Education 80, no. 2 (2007): 158-178.
6
Ibid., 159.
5

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Schools and parents shouldnt set limits on how much teenagers are allowed to
work at jobs. Lee and Staff s carefully designed study found that intensive work
does not affect the likelihood of high school dropout among youths who have a
high propensity to spend long hours on the job (2007, p. 171). Teens should be
trusted to learn how to manage their time.

In this latter example, its now clear that Lee and Staff are scholars and that their empirical
study is being used as evidence for this argumentative point. Using a source in this way
invites the reader to check out Lee and Staff s work for themselves if they doubt this claim.
Many writing instructors encourage their students to contextualize their use of sources by
making a quotation sandwich; that is, introduce the quote in some way and then follow
it up with your own words. If youve made a bad habit of dropping in unintroduced quotes,
the quotation sandwich idea may help you improve your skills, but in general you dont
need to approach every quote or paraphrase as a three-part structure to have well integrated
sources. You should, however, avoid ending a paragraph with a quotation. If youre struggling to figure out what to write after a quote or close paraphrase, it may be that you havent
yet figured out what role the quote is playing in your own analysis. If that happens to you a
lot, try writing the whole first draft in your own words and then incorporate material from
sources as you revise with They Say/I Say in mind.

Principle 3: Use sources efficiently


Some student writers are in a rut of only quoting whole sentences. Some others, like myself
as a student, get overly enamored of extended block quotes and the scholarly look they give
to the page.7 These arent the worst sins of academic writing, but they get in the way of one
of the key principles of writing with sources: shaping quotes and paraphrases efficiently.
Efficiency follows from the second principle, because when you fully incorporate sources
into your own explicit argument, you zero in on the phrases, passages, and ideas that are
relevant to your points. Its a very good sign for your paper when most quotes are short (key
terms, phrases, or parts of sentences) and the longer quotes (whole sentences and passages)
are clearly justified by the discussion in which theyre embedded. Every bit of every quote
should feel indispensable to the paper. An overabundance of long quotes usually means that
your own argument is undeveloped. The most incandescent quotes will not hide that fact
from your professor.
Also, some student writers forget that quoting is not the only way to incorporate sources.
Paraphasing and summarizing are sophisticated skills that are often more appropriate to
use than direct quoting. The first two paragraphs of the example passage above do not
include any quotations, even though they are both clearly focused on presenting the work
of others. Student writers may avoid paraphrasing out of fear of plagiarizing, and its true
that a poorly executed paraphrase will make it seem like the student writer is fraudulently
claiming the wordsmithing work of others as his or her own. Sticking to direct quotes
seems safer. However, it is worth your time to master paraphasing because it often helps you
be more clear and concise, drawing out only those elements that are relevant to the thread
of your analysis.
It took me a long time to stop abusing block quotes. They made me feel like my paper was
an unassailable fortress of citation! With the friendly but pointed feedback of my professors, I
gradually came to see how they took too much space away from my own argument.
7

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For example, heres a passage from a hypothetical paper with a block quote that is fully
relevant to the argument but, nevertheless, inefficient:
Drawing on a lifetime of research, Kahneman concludes our brains are prone to
error:8
System 1 registers the cognitive ease with which it processes information, but
it does not generate a warning signal when it becomes unreliable. Intuitive
answers come to mind quickly and confidently, whether they originate from
skills or from heuristics. There is no simple way for System 2 to distinguish
between a skilled and a heuristic response. Its only recourse is to slow down
and attempt to construct an answer on its own, which it is reluctant to do
because it is indolent. Many suggestions of System 1 are casually endorsed
with minimal checking, as in the bat-and-ball problem.
While people can get better at recognizing and avoiding these errors, Kahneman
suggests, the more robust solutions involve developing procedures within organizations to promote careful, effortful thinking in making important decisions and
judgments.

Even a passage that is important to reference and is well contextualized in the flow of the
paper will be inefficient if it introduces terms and ideas that arent central to the analysis
within the paper. Imagine, for example, that other parts of this hypothetical paper use
Kahnemans other terms for System 1 (fast thinking) and System 2 (slow thinking); the
sudden encounter of System 1 and System 2 would be confusing and tedious for your
reader. Similarly, the terms heuristics and bat-and-ball problem might be unfamiliar
to your reader. Their presence in the block quote just muddies the waters. In this case, a
paraphrase is a much better choice. Heres an example passage that uses a paraphrase to
establish the same points more clearly and efficiently:
Drawing on a lifetime of research, Kahneman summarizes that our brains are prone
to error because they necessarily rely on cognitive shortcuts that may or may not
yield valid judgments.9 We have the capacity to stop and examine our assumptions,
Kahneman points out, but we often want to avoid that hard work. As a result,
we tend to accept our quick, intuitive responses. While people can get better at
recognizing and avoiding these errors, Kahneman suggests that the more robust
solutions involve developing procedures within organizations to promote careful,
effortful thinking in making important decisions and judgments.

Not only is the paraphrased version shorter (97 words versus 151), it is clearer and more
efficient because it highlights the key ideas, avoiding specific terms and examples that arent
used in the rest of the paper. If other parts of your paper did refer to Kahnemans System 1
and System 2, then you might choose to include some quoted phrases to make use of some
of Kahnemans great language. Perhaps something like this:
Drawing on a lifetime of research, Kahneman summarizes that our brains are
prone to error because they necessarily rely on cognitive shortcuts that may or
may not yield valid judgments.10 System 1, Kahneman explains, does not generate
Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, 416-7.
Ibid.
10
Ibid.
8
9

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a warning signal when it becomes unreliable. 11 System 2 can stop and examine
these assumptions, but it usually wants to avoid that hard work. As a result, our
quick, intuitive responses are casually endorsed with minimal checking. 12 While
people can get better at recognizing and avoiding these errors, Kahneman suggests,
the more robust solutions involve developing procedures within organizations to
promote careful, effortful thinking in making important decisions and judgments.

Whether you choose a long quote, short quote, paraphrase or summary depends on the
role that the source in playing in your analysis. The trick is to make deliberate, thoughtful
decisions about how to incorporate ideas and words from others.
Paraphrasing, summarizing, and the mechanical conventions of quoting take a lot of practice to master. Numerous other resources (like those listed at the end of this chapter) explain
these practices clearly and succinctly. Bookmark some good sources and refer to them as
needed. If you suspect that youre in a quoting rut, try out some new ways of incorporating
sources.

Principle 4: Choose precise verbs of attribution


Its time to get beyond the all-purpose says. And please dont look up says in the thesaurus
and substitute verbs like proclaim (unless there was actually a proclamation) or pronounce
(unless there was actually a pronouncement). Heres a list of 15 useful alternatives:13
Claims

Asserts
Relates

Recounts

Complains
Reasons

Proposes

Suggests (if the author is speculating or hypothesizing)


Contests (disagrees)
Concludes
Shows

Argues

Explains

Indicates

Points out
Offers

More precise choices like these carry a lot more information than says, enabling you to
relate more with fewer words. For one thing, they can quickly convey what kind of idea
youre citing: a speculative one (postulates)? A conclusive one (determines)? A contro Ibid, 416.
Ibid, 417.
13
Google verbs of attribution to find other suggestions.
11
12

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versial one (counters)? You can further show how youre incorporating these sources into
your own narrative. For example, if you write that an author claims something, youre
presenting yourself as fairly neutral about that claim. If you instead write that the author
shows something, then you signal to your reader that you find that evidence more convincing. Suggests on the other hand is a much weaker endorsement. As Ill discuss in
Chapter 8, saying more with less makes your writing much more engaging.

Sources are your best friend. They either help you reaffirm your thesis or
offer a differing opinion that you can challenge in your paper. The biggest thing to worry about, when it comes to sources, is citing. However,
there are a multitude of resources to help you cite properly. My personal
favorite is called Knightcite.com. You just pick the type of resource, fill in
the information on it and voila, you have a perfectly cited resource!
Kaethe Leonard

Conclusion
Like so many things in adult life, writing in college is often both more liberating and
burdensome than writing in high school and before. On the one hand, Ive had students tell
me that their high-school experiences made it seem that their own opinions didnt matter
in academic writing, and that they cant make any claims that arent exactly paralleled by a
pedigreed quotation. Writing papers based on their own insights and opinions can seem
freeing in contrast. At the same time, a college student attending full time may be expected
to have original and well considered ideas about pre-Columbian Latin American history,
congressional redistricting, sports in society, post-colonial literatures, and nano-technology,
all in about two weeks. Under these conditions, its easy to see why some would long for
the days when simple, competent reporting did the job. You probably wont have an authentic intellectual engagement with every college writing assignment, but approaching
your written work as an opportunity to dialogue with the material can help you find the
momentum you need to succeed with this work.

Other resources
1. Graff and Birkensteins little book, They Say/I Say: The Moves that Matter in Academic Writing 2nd ed. (New York: Norton, 2009) is a gem and well worth reading.
They offer a series of templates that can help you visualize new ways of relating to
sources and constructing arguments.

2. Another excellent resource is Gordon Harveys Writing with Sources: A Guide for
Students 2nd ed. (Indianapolis: Hackett, 2008), In it, he discusses the key principles
for incorporating sources, the stylistic conventions for quoting and paraphrasing,
and the basics of common citation styles. Thats all information you want to have
at the ready.

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3. Many university writing centers have nicely concise on-line guides to summarizing,
paraphrasing, and quoting. I found some especially good ones at the University
of Wisconsin, the University of Washington, and, as always, the Purdue Online
Writing Laboratory.

Exercises
1. Here is a passage from a world history textbook:14
Like so many things desired by Europeans and supplied by Asiansat first luxury
items for the elite such as silk or porcelain, but increasingly products like tea from
China for the mass marketcotton textiles were produced well and cheaply in
India. The British textile manufacturers focused on the cheap part and complained
that with relatively higher wages, British manufacturers could not compete. India
had a competitive advantage in the eighteenth century, being able to undersell
in the world market virtually any other producer of textiles. Some thought the
reason for cheap Indian textiles was because of a low living standard, or a large
population earning depressed wages, but all of those have been shown to not be
true: Indian textile workers in the eighteenth century had just as high a standard of
living as British workers. So, if it was not a low standard of living that gave India
its competitive advance, what did?
In a word: agriculture. Indian agriculture was so productive that the amount of
food produced, and hence its cost, was significantly lower than in Europe. In the
preindustrial age, when working families spent 60-80 percent of their earnings on
food, the cost of food was the primary determinant of their real wages (i.e. how
much a pound, dollar, a real, or a pagoda could buy). In India (and China and Japan
as well), the amount of grain harvested from a given amount of seed was in the
ration of 20:1 (e.g., twenty bushels of rice harvested for every one planted), whereas
in England it was at best 8:1. Asian agriculture thus was more than twice as efficient as British (and by extension European) agriculture, and foodthe major
component in the cost of livingcost less in Asia.

Drawing on this passage, try out different quoting, paraphrasing and summarizing options:
a. Quote a key phrase or part of a sentence, naming the source and incorporating the quote
within your own logic.
b. Quote an entire sentence or two, providing context and incorporating the quote within
your own logic.
c. Construct an unacceptable paraphrase of part of the passage; copying a couple sentences
and change just a few of the key words.

d. Construct a successful paraphrase of part of the passage; describing it in your own words.
e. Write a sentence, with a citation, that summarizes the general point of the passage.

2. Rewrite your responses to 1a and 1b, above, changing the verbs of attribution. How do
the new verbs change the meaning or tone of your sentence?
Robert B. Marks, The Origins of the Modern World: A Global and Ecological Narrative from the
Fifteenth to the Twenty-first Century (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2007), 95.
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Chapter 6

Back to Basics: The Perfect


Paragraph

Paragraphs
As Michael Harvey writes, paragraphs are in essencea form of punctuation, and like
other forms of punctuation they are meant to make written material easy to read.1 Effective
paragraphs are the fundamental units of academic writing; consequently, the thoughtful,
multifaceted arguments that your professors expect depend on them. Without good paragraphs, you simply cannot clearly convey sequential points and their relationships to one
another. The purpose of this chapter is to highlight strategies for constructing, ordering,
and relating paragraphs in academic writing. It could just as well be titled Organization
because whether or not readers perceive a paper to be well organized depends largely on
effective paragraphing.
Many novice writers tend to make a sharp distinction between content and style, thinking
that a paper can be strong in one and weak in the other, but focusing on organization
shows how content and style converge in deliberative academic writing. A poorly organized
paper may contain insightful kernels, but a thoughtful, satisfying argument cant take shape
without paragraphs that are crafted, ordered, and connected effectively. On the other side,
one can imagine a string of slick, error-free sentences that are somehow lacking in interesting ideas. However, your professors will view even the most elegant prose as rambling
and tedious if there isnt a careful, coherent argument to give the text meaning. Paragraphs
are the stuff of academic writing and, thus, worth our attention here.

Key sentences (a.k.a. topic sentences)


In academic writing, readers expect each paragraph to have a sentence or two that captures
its main point. Theyre often called topic sentences, though many writing instructors
Michael Harvey, The Nuts and Bolts of College Writing, Second Edition (Indianapolis, IN: Hackett
Publishing, 2013), 70.
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prefer to call them key sentences. There are at least two downsides of the phrase topic
sentence. First, it makes it seem like the paramount job of that sentence is simply to announce the topic of the paragraph. Second, it makes it seem like the topic sentence must
always be a single grammatical sentence. Calling it a key sentence reminds us that it
expresses the central idea of the paragraph. And sometimes a question or a two-sentence
construction functions as the key.

The key to staying on topic within a paragraph is starting with a topic


sentence. It doesnt even have to be perfect to work from it! Just figure out
what you really want to say in that one specific paragraph and go. Then,
you EDIT (haha, made you flinch!) All joking aside, editing really is a
very important step in this process. By going back over what you wrote,
you can check to see if what you wrote in that paragraph fits with what
you actually intend to say as well as to make sure everything is cohesive
and coherent!
Kaethe Leonard
Key sentences in academic writing do two things. First, they establish the main point that
the rest of the paragraph supports. Second, they situate each paragraph within the sequence
of the argument, a task that requires transitioning from the prior paragraph. Consider these
two examples: 2

Version A:
Now we turn to the epidemiological evidence.

Version B:
The epidemiological evidence provides compelling support for the hypothesis
emerging from etiological studies.

Both versions convey a topic; its pretty easy to predict that the paragraph will be about
epidemiological evidence, but only the second version establishes an argumentative point
and puts it in context. The paragraph doesnt just describe the epidemiological evidence;
it shows how epidemiology is telling the same story as etiology. Similarly, while Version
A doesnt relate to anything in particular, Version B immediately suggests that the prior
paragraph addresses the biological pathway (i.e. etiology) of a disease and that the new
paragraph will bolster the emerging hypothesis with a different kind of evidence. As a
reader, its easy to keep track of how the paragraph about cells and chemicals and such
relates to the paragraph about populations in different places.

By clearly establishing an essential point within its analytic context, a well written key
sentence gives both you and your reader a firm grasp of how each point relates. For example,
compare these two sets of key sentences, each introducing a sequential paragraph3:
Etiology is the cause of a diseasewhats actually happening in cells and tissueswhile
epidemiology is the incidence of a disease in a population.
3
This example is drawn from key points from Steven Epsteins Impure Science: AIDS, Activism,
and the Politics of Knowledge (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1996). An excellent read.
2

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Version A:
At the beginning of the AIDS epidemic, the cause of the disease was unclear.
The cause of AIDS is HIV.
There are skeptics who question whether HIV is the cause.

Version B:
At the beginning of the AIDS epidemic, the cause of the disease was unclear,
leading to a broad range of scientific speculation.
By 1986 HIV had been isolated and found to correlate almost exactly with the
incidence of AIDS.
HIV skeptics, on the other hand, sought to discredit claims based on epidemiology
by emphasizing that the pathogenesis of HIV was still unknown.
Version A isnt wrong per se; it just illustrates a lost opportunity to show the important connections among points. Both versions portray a process unfolding over
time: initial uncertainty followed by a breakthrough discovery and then controversy. Even with the same substantive points, a person reading Version A would
have to work harder to see how the material in the paragraphs connects. Readers
experience Version B as clearer and more engaging.
Thinking of key sentences as sequential points in an argument reminds one that
a key sentence doesnt have to always be a single declarative one. Sometimes you
need two sentences together to achieve the work of a key sentence, and sometimes
a question or quotation does a better job than a declarative sentence in clarifying
a logical sequence:

Version C:
At the beginning of the AIDS epidemic the cause was unclear. Virologists, bacteriologists, immunologists, and epidemiologists all pursued different leads, reflecting
their particular areas of expertise
If drug use, lifestyle, and immune overload didnt cause AIDS, what did?
Ive asked questions they apparently cant answer, claimed retrovirologist Peter
Duesberg4 who became an oft-quoted skeptical voice in media accounts of AIDS
research in the mid-1980s.

Version C is based on the same three sequential points as Versions A and B: (1) the cause
of AIDS was initially unclear (2) HIV was accepted as the cause (3) lone dissenters questioned the claims. However, versions B and C have much more meaning and momentum,
and version C, depending on the nature of the argument, features more precise and lively
stylistic choices. Opening the second paragraph with a question (that then gets answered)
carries forth the sense of befuddlement that researchers initially experienced and helps to
convey why the discovery of HIV was a hugely important turning point. Using the self This Duesberg quote is from Epstein, Impure Science, 112.

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glorifying Duesberg quote to launch the third paragraph makes the point about lingering
skepticism while also introducing a portrait of a leading figure among the skeptics. While
Version B is effective as well, Version C illustrates some of the more lively choices available
to academic writers.

A last thing to note about key sentences is that academic readers expect them to be at the
beginning of the paragraph.5 That helps readers comprehend your argument. To see how,
try this: find an academic piece (such as a textbook or scholarly article) that strikes you as
well written and go through part of it reading just the first sentence of each paragraph. You
should be able to easily follow the sequence of logic. When youre writing for professors, it
is especially effective to put your key sentences first because they usually convey your own
original thinking, which, as youve read here, is exactly what your instructors are looking for
in your work. Its a very good sign when your paragraphs are typically composed of a telling
key sentence followed by evidence and explanation.
Knowing this convention of academic writing can help you both read and write more
effectively. When youre reading a complicated academic piece for the first time, you might
want to go through reading only the first sentence or two of each paragraph to get the
overall outline of the argument. Then you can go back and read all of it with a clearer
picture of how each of the details fit in.6 And when youre writing, you may also find it
useful to write the first sentence of each paragraph (instead of a topic-based outline) to
map out a thorough argument before getting immersed in sentence-level wordsmithing.
For example, compare these two scaffolds. Which one would launch you into a smoother
drafting process?:7

Version A (Outline Of Topics):


I. Granovetters Strength of weak ties
a. Definition

b. Examplegetting jobs
II. Creativity in social networks
a. Explanation

b. Richard Floridas argument


III. Implications

a. For urban planners

b. For institutions of higher education

This sentence right here is an example!


I hesitate to add that this first-sentence trick is also a good one for when you havent completed
an assigned reading and only have 10 minutes before class. Reading just the first sentence of each
paragraph will quickly tell you a lot about the assigned text.
7
This example is from Katherine Giuffre, Communities and Networks: Using Social Network
Analysis to Rethink Urban and Community Studies (Malden, MA: Polity, 2013).
5
6

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Version B (Key-Sentence Sketch):


The importance of networking for both career development and social change
is well known. Granovetter (1973) explains that weak tiesthat is, ties among
acquaintancesare often more useful in job hunting because they connect jobseekers to a broader range of people and workplaces.
Subsequent research in network analysis has shown that weak ties can promote
creativity by bringing ideas together from different social realms.
Richard Florida (2002) argues that cities would do well to facilitate weak ties in
order to recruit members of the creative class and spur economic development.
Floridas argument can inspire a powerful new approach to strategic planning
within colleges and universities as well.

As you can see, emphasizing key sentences in both the process and product of academic
writing is one way to ensure that your efforts stay focused on developing your argument and
communicating your own original thinking in a clear, logical way.

A good paper has cohesion. I love outlines, so I really like the idea of
writing my first sentence of each paragraph as my plan. This way, you
know what to write about and you know that your paper will flow easily.
As a reader, this is an important characteristic to me. If the paragraphs
are just jumping around in all different directions, I quickly lose interest
in trying to follow along. The reader should not have to struggle to follow
your paper. Flow can make the difference between an okay paper and a
scholarly product.
Aly Button

Cohesion and coherence


With a key sentence established, the next task is to shape the body of your paragraph to be
both cohesive and coherent. As Williams and Bizup8 explain, cohesion is about the sense
of flow (how each sentence fits with the next), while coherence is about the sense of the
whole.9 Some students worry too much about flow and spend a lot of time on sentencelevel issues to promote it. I encourage you to focus on underlying structure. For the most
part, a text reads smoothly when it conveys a thoughtful and well organized argument or
analysis. Focus first and most on your ideas, on crafting an ambitious analysis. The most
useful guides advise you to first focus on getting your ideas on paper and then revising for
organization and wordsmithing later, refining the analysis as you go. Thus, I discuss creating
cohesion and coherent paragraphs here as if you already have some rough text written and
Joseph M. Williams.and Joseph Bizup. Style: Lessons in Clarity and Grace 11th edition (New
York: Longman, 2014), 68.
9
Ibid., 71.
8

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are in the process of smoothing out your prose to clarify your argument for both your reader
and yourself.

Cohesion refers to the flow from sentence to sentence. For example, compare these passages:

Version A (That I Rewrote):


Granovetter begins by looking at balance theory. If an actor, A, is strongly tied to
both B and C, it is extremely likely that B and C are, sooner or later, going to be
tied to each other, according to balance theory (1973:1363).10 Bridge ties between
cliques are always weak ties, Granovetter argues (1973:1364). Weak ties may not
necessarily be bridges, but Granovetter argues that bridges will be weak. If two
actors share a strong tie, they will draw in their other strong relations and will
eventually form a clique. Only weak ties that do not have the strength to draw
together all the friends of friends can connect people in different cliques.

Version B (The Original By Giuffre):


Granovetter begins by looking at balance theory. In brief, balance theory tells us
that if an actor, A, is strongly tied to both B and C, it is extremely likely that B and C
are, sooner or later, going to be tied to each other (1973:1363). Granovetter argues
that because of this, bridge ties between cliques are always weak ties (1973:1364).
Weak ties may not necessarily be bridges, but Granovetter argues that bridges will
be weak. This is because if two actors share a strong tie, they will draw in their other
strong relations and will eventually form a clique. The only way, therefore, that
people in different cliques can be connected is through weak ties that do not have
the strength to draw together all the friends of friends. 11

Version A has the exact same information as version B, but it is harder to read because it is
less cohesive. Each sentence in version B begins with old information and bridges to new
information. Heres Version B again with the relevant parts emboldened:
Granovetter begins by looking at balance theory. In brief, balance theory tells us
that if an actor, A, is strongly tied to both B and C, it is extremely likely that B and C
are, sooner or later, going to be tied to each other (1973:1363). Granovetter argues
that because of this, bridge ties between cliques are always weak ties (1973:1364).
Weak ties may not necessarily be bridges, but Granovetter argues that bridges will
be weak. This is because if two actors share a strong tie, they will draw in their other
strong relations and will eventually form a clique. The only way, therefore, that
people in different cliques can be connected is through weak ties that do not have
the strength to draw together all the friends of friends.

The first sentence establishes the key idea of balance theory. The next sentence begins with
balance theory and ends with social ties, which is the focus of the third sentence. The concept of weak ties connects the third and fourth sentences and concept of cliques the fifth
and sixth sentences. In Version A, in contrast, the first sentence focuses on balance theory,
but then the second sentence makes a new point about social ties before telling the reader
that the point comes from balance theory. The reader has to take in a lot of unfamiliar
The quote uses a version of an ASA-style in-text citation for Mark S. Granovetter, The
Strength of Weak Ties, American Journal of Sociology 78 (1973): 1360-80.
11
Guiffre. Communities and Networks, 98.
10

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information before learning how it fits in with familiar concepts. Version A is coherent, but
the lack of cohesion makes it tedious to read.

The lesson is this: if you or others perceive a passage youve written to be awkward or
choppy, even though the topic is consistent, try rewriting it to ensure that each sentence
begins with a familiar term or concept. If your points dont naturally daisy-chain together
like the examples given here, consider numbering them. For example, you may choose to
write, Proponents of the legislation point to four major benefits. Then you could discuss
four loosely related ideas without leaving your reader wondering how they relate.
While cohesion is about the sense of flow; coherence is about the sense of the whole. For
example, heres a passage that is cohesive (from sentence to sentence) but lacks coherence:
Your social networks and your location within them shape the kinds and amount
of information that you have access to. Information is distinct from data, in that
makes some kind of generalization about a person, thing, or population. Defensible
generalizations about society can be either probabilities (i.e., statistics) or patterns
(often from qualitative analysis). Such probabilities and patterns can be temporal,
spatial, or simultaneous.

Each sentence in the above passage starts with a familiar idea and progresses to a new
one, but it lacks coherencea sense of being about one thing. Good writers often write
passages like that when theyre free-writing or using the drafting stage to cast a wide net
for ideas. A writer weighing the power and limits of social network analysis may free-write
something like that example and, from there, develop a more specific plan for summarizing
key insights about social networks and then discussing them with reference to the core
tenets of social science. As a draft, an incoherent paragraph often points to a productive
line of reasoning; one just has to continue thinking it through in order to identify a clear
argumentative purpose for each paragraph. With its purpose defined, each paragraph, then,
becomes a lot easier to write. Coherent paragraphs arent just about style; they are a sign of
a thoughtful, well developed analysis.

The wind-up
Some guides advise you to end each paragraph with a specific concluding sentence, in a
sense, to treat each paragraph as a kind of mini-essay. But thats not a widely held convention. Most well written academic pieces dont adhere to that structure. The last sentence of
the paragraph should certainly be in your own words (as in, not a quote), but as long as the
paragraph succeeds in carrying out the task that it has been assigned by its key sentence,
you dont need to worry about whether that last sentence has an air of conclusiveness. For
example, consider these paragraphs about the cold fusion controversy of the 1980s that
appeared in a best-selling textbook12:
The experiment seemed straightforward and there were plenty of scientists willing
to try it. Many did. It was wonderful to have a simple laboratory experiment on
fusion to try after the decades of embarrassing attempts to control hot fusion. This
effort required multi-billion dollar machines whose every success seemed to be
Harry Collins and Trevor Pinch, The Golem: What You Should Know About Science 2nd ed.
(Cambridge: Canto, 1998), 58.
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capped with an unanticipated failure. Cold fusion seemed to provide, as Martin


Fleischmann said during the course of that famous Utah press conference, another
routethe route of little science.

In that example, the first and last sentences in the paragraph are somewhat symmetrical:
the authors introduce the idea of accessible science, contrast it with big science, and bring
it back to the phrase little science. Heres an example from the same chapter of the same
book that does not have any particular symmetry13:
The struggle between proponents and critics in a scientific controversy is always
a struggle for credibility. When scientists make claims which are literally incredible, as in the cold fusion case, they face an uphill struggle. The problem Pons and
Fleischmann had to overcome was that they had credibility as electrochemists but
not as nuclear physicists. And it was nuclear physics where their work was likely to
have its main impact.

The last sentence of the paragraph doesnt mirror the first, but the paragraph still works
just fine. In general, every sentence of academic writing should add some unique content.
Dont trouble yourself with having the last sentence in every paragraph serve as a miniconclusion. Instead, worry about developing each point sufficiently and making your logical
sequence clear.

Conclusion: paragraphs as punctuation


To reiterate the initial point, it is useful to think of paragraphs as punctuation that organize
your ideas in a readable way. Each paragraph should be an irreplaceable node within a
coherent sequence of logic. Thinking of paragraphs as building blocks evokes the fiveparagraph theme structure explained in Chapter 2: if you have identical stone blocks, it
hardly matters what order theyre in. In the successful organically structured college paper,
the structure and tone of each paragraph reflects its indispensable role within the overall
piece. These goalsmaking every bit count and having each part situated within the
wholealso anchor the discussion in the next chapter: how to write introductions and
conclusions that framerather than simply book-endyour analysis.

Other resources
1. Michael Harveys The Nuts and Bolts of College Writing 2nd ed. (Indianapolis, IN:
Hackett Publishing, 2013) is another short and affordable guide. His discussion of
paragraphing is among the many gems in the book.
2. Online resources from university writing centers offer a lot of great information
about effective paragraphing and topic sentences. I especially admire this one from
Indiana University, this one from Colorado State, and this one from the University
of Richmond.
3. In addition to Williams and Bizups excellent lesson on cohesion and coherence in
Style: Lessons in Clarity and Grace 11th ed. (New York: Longman, 2014), check out
Ibid., 74.

13

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this site at George Mason University, this handout from Duke University, and this
resource from Clarkson University.

Exercises
1. Find a piece of academic writing you admire and copy down the first sentence of
each paragraph. How well do those sentences reflect the flow of the argument?
Show those sentences to other people; how clearly can they envision the flow of
the piece?
2. For each of the following short passages, decide whether they lack cohesion or
coherence.

A. The Roman siege of Masada in the first century CE, ending as it did with the
suicide of 960 Jewish rebels, has been interpreted in various ways in Jewish history.
History is best understood as a product of the present: the stories we tell ourselves
to make sense of our complicated world. History lessons in elementary school curricula, however, rarely move beyond facts and timelines.

B. Polar explorer Earnest Shackleton is often considered a model of effective leadership. The Endurance was frozen into the Antarctic ice where it was subsequently
crushed, abandoning Shackleton and his 22-person crew on unstable ice floes,
hundreds of miles from any human outpost. Two harrowing journeys by lifeboat
and several long marches over the ice over the course of two Antarctic winters
eventually resulted in their rescue. Amazingly, no one died during the ordeal.
C. A recent analysis of a 1.8 million year-old hominid skull suggests that human evolutionary lineage is simpler than we thought. Homo erectus, a species that persisted
almost 2 million years, lived in most parts of Africa as well as Western and Eastern
Asia. Some scientists are now arguing that Homo erectus individuals varied widely in
their body size and skull shape, a claim strongly supported by the recently analyzed
skull. Thus, some other named species, such as Homo habilis and Homo rudolfensis
are not separate species but instead regional variations of Homo erectus.

3. Rewrite passages B. and C. above to make them more cohesive.

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Chapter 7

Intros and Outros

In todays world
Those opening wordsso common in student papersrepresent the most prevalent
misconception about introductions: that they shouldnt really say anything substantive. As
noted in Chapter 2, the five-paragraph format that most students mastered before coming
to college suggests that introductory paragraphs should start very general and gradually
narrow down to the thesis. As a result, students frequently write introductions for college
papers in which the first two or three (or more) sentences are patently obvious or overly
broad. Charitable and well rested instructors just skim over that text and start reading
closely when they arrive at something substantive. Frustrated and overtired instructors emit
a dramatic self-pitying sigh, assuming that the whole paper will be as lifeless and gassy as
those first few sentences. If youve gotten into the habit of beginning opening sentences
with the following phrases, firmly resolve to strike them from your repertoire right now:
In todays world
Throughout human history
Since the dawn of time
Websters Dictionary defines [CONCEPT] as

For one thing, sentences that begin with the first three stems are often wrong. For example,
someone may write, Since the dawn of time, people have tried to increase crop yields. In
reality, people have not been trying to increase crop yields throughout human history
agriculture is only about 23,000 years old, after alland certainly not since the dawn of
time (whenever that was). For another, sentences that start so broadly, even when factually
correct, could not possibly end with anything interesting.

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I started laughing when I first read this chapter because my go-to introduction for every paper was always Throughout history... In high school
it was truemy first few sentences did not have any meaning. Now I
understand it should be the exact opposite. Introductions should scream
to your readers, HEY GUYS, READ THIS! I dont want my readers eyes to
glaze over before they even finish the first paragraph, do you? And how
annoying is it to read a bunch of useless sentences anyways, right? Every
sentence should be necessary and you should set your papers with a good
start.
Aly Button
So what should you do? Well, start at the beginning. By that I mean, start explaining what
the reader needs to know to comprehend your thesis and its importance. For example,
compare the following two paragraphs:

Five-Paragraph Theme Version:


Throughout time, human societies have had religion. Major world religions since
the dawn of civilization include Zoroastrianism, Hinduism, Animism, Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam. These and all other religions provide a set of moral principles, a leadership structure, and an explanation for unknown questions such as what
happens after people die. Since the dawn of religion, it has always been opposed
to science because one is based on faith and the other on reason. However, the
notion of embodied cognition is a place where physical phenomena connect with
religious ones. Paradoxically, religion can emphasize a deep involvement in reality,
an embodied cognition that empowers followers to escape from physical constraints
and reach a new spirituality. Religion carefully constructs a physical environment
to synthesize an individuals memories, emotions, and physical actions, in a manner
that channels the individuals cognitive state towards spiritual transcendence.

Organically Structured Version:1


Religion is an endeavor to cultivate freedom from bodily constraints to reach
a higher state of being beyond the physical constraints of reality. But how is it
possible to employ a system, the human body, to transcend its own limitations?
Religion and science have always had an uneasy relationship as empiricism is
stretched to explain religious phenomena, but psychology has recently added a
new perspective to the discussion. Embodiment describes the interaction between
humans and the environment that lays a foundation for cognition and can help
explain the mechanisms that underlie religions influence on believers. This is a
rare moment where science and religion are able to coexist without the familiar
controversy. Paradoxically, religion can emphasize a deep involvement in reality,
This example is slightly adapted from a student-authored essay: Victor Seet, Embodiment
in Religion, Discoveries, 11 (2012). Discoveries is an annual publication of the Knight Institute
for Writing in the Disciplines of Cornell University which publishes excellent papers written by
Cornell undergraduates.
1

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an embodied cognition that empowers followers to escape from physical constraints


and reach a new spirituality. Religion carefully constructs a physical environment
to synthesize an individuals memories, emotions, and physical actions, in a manner
that channels the individuals cognitive state towards spiritual transcendence.

In the first version, the first three sentences state well known facts that do not directly relate
to the thesis. The fourth sentence is where the action starts, though that sentence (Since
the dawn of religion, it has always been opposed to science because one is based on faith
and the other on reason) is still overstated: when was this dawn of religion? And was there
science, as we now understand it, at that time? The reader has to slog through to the fifth
sentence before the intro starts to develop some momentum.

Training in the five-paragraph theme format seems to have convinced some student writers
that beginning with substantive material will be too abrupt for the reader. But the second
example shows that a meatier beginning isnt jarring; it is actually much more engaging.
The first sentence of the organic example is somewhat general, but it specifies the particular
aspect of religion (transcending physical experience) that is germane to the thesis. The next
six sentences lay out the ideas and concepts that explain the thesis, which is provided in the
last two sentences. Overall, every sentence is needed to thoroughly frame the thesis. It is a
lively paragraph in itself, and it piques the readers interest in the authors original thinking
about religion.
Sometimes a vague introductory paragraph reflects a simple, obvious thesis (see Chapter 3)
and a poorly thought-out paper. More often, though, a shallow introduction represents a
missed opportunity to convey the writers depth of thought from the get-go. Students adhering to the five-paragraph theme format sometime assume that such vagueness is needed
to book-end an otherwise pithy paper. As you can see from these examples, that is simply
untrue. Ive seen some student writers begin with a vague, high-school style intro (thinking
it obligatory) and then write a wonderfully vivid and engaging introduction as their second
paragraph. Other papers Ive seen have an interesting, original thesis embedded in late body
paragraphs that should be articulated up front and used to shape the whole body. If you
must write a vague since the dawn of time intro to get the writing process going, then go
ahead. Just budget the time to rewrite the intro around your well developed, arguable thesis
and ensure that the body paragraphs are organized explicitly by your analytical thread.

Here are two more examples of excellent introductory paragraphs written by undergraduate
students in different fields. Note how, in both cases, (1) the first sentence has real substance,
(2) every sentence is indispensable to setting up the thesis, and (3) the thesis is complex and
somewhat surprising. Both of these introductory paragraphs set an ambitious agenda for
the paper. As a reader, its pretty easy to imagine how the body paragraphs that follow will
progress through the nuanced analysis needed to carry out the thesis:
From Davis OConnells Abelard:2

He rebelled against his teacher, formed his own rival school, engaged in a passionate affair with a teenager, was castrated, and became a monk. All in a days
work. Perhaps its no surprise that Peter Abelard gained the title of heretic along
the way. A 12th-century philosopher and theologian, Abelard tended to alienate
nearly everyone he met with his extremely arrogant and egotistical personality.
This very flaw is what led him to start preaching to students that he had stolen
Davis OConnell, Abelard: A Heretic of a Different Nature, Discoveries 10 (2011): 36-41.

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from his former master, which further deteriorated his reputation. Yet despite all of
the senseless things that he did, his teachings did not differ much from Christian
doctrine. Although the church claimed to have branded Abelard a heretic purely
because of his religious views, the other underlying reasons for these accusations
involve his conceited personality, his relationship with the 14-year-old Heloise,
and the political forces of the 12th century.

From Logan Skellys Staphylococcus aureus:3

Bacterial resistance to antibiotics is causing a crisis in modern healthcare. The evolution of multi-drug resistant Staphylococcus aureus is of particular concern because
of the morbidity and mortality it causes, the limited treatment options it poses,
and the difficulty in implementing containment measures for its control. In order
to appreciate the virulence of S. aureus and to help alleviate the problems its resistance is causing, it is important to study the evolution of antibiotic resistance in
this pathogen, the mechanisms of its resistance, and the factors that may limit or
counteract its evolution. It is especially important to examine how human actions
are causing evolutionary changes in this bacterial species. This review will examine
the historical sequence of causation that has led to antibiotic resistance in this
microorganism and why natural selection favors the resistant trait. It is the goal of
this review to illuminate the scope of the problem produced by antibiotic resistance
in S. aureus and to illustrate the need for judicious antibiotic usage to prevent this
pathogen from evolving further pathogenicity and virulence.

If vague introductory paragraphs are bad, why were you taught them? In essence you were
taught the form so that you could later use it to deepen your thinking. By producing the
five-paragraph theme over and over, it has probably become second nature for you to find a
clear thesis and shape the intro paragraph around it, tasks you absolutely must accomplish
in academic writing. However, youve probably been taught to proceed from general to
specific in your intro and encouraged to think of general as vague. At the college
level, think of general as context: begin by explaining the conceptual, historical, or factual
context that the reader needs in order to grasp the significance of the argument to come. Its
not so much a structure of generaltospecific; instead its contexttoargument.

My average for writing an intro is three times. As in, it takes me three


tries at writing one to get it to say exactly what I want it to. The intro, I
feel, is the most important part of an essay. This is kind of like a road map
for the rest of the paper. My suggestion is to do the intro first. This way,
the paper can be done over a period of time rather than running the risk
of forgetting what you wanted to say if you stop.
Kaethe Leonard

Logan Skelly, Staphylococcus aureus: The Evolution of a Persistent Pathogen, Discoveries 10


(2011): 89-102.

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In conclusion
I confess that I still find conclusions hard to write. By the time Im finalizing a conclusion,
Im often fatigued with the project and struggling to find something new to say that isnt a
departure into a whole different realm. I also find that I have become so immersed in the
subject that it seems like anything I have to say is absurdly obvious.4 A good conclusion is
a real challenge, one that takes persistent work and some finesse.
Strong conclusions do two things: they bring the argument to a satisfying close and they
explain some of the most important implications. Youve probably been taught to re-state
your thesis using different words, and it is true that your reader will likely appreciate a
brief summary of your overall argument: say, two or three sentences for papers less than 20
pages. Its perfectly fine to use what they call metadiscourse in this summary; metadiscourse is text like, I have argued that or This analysis reveals that . Go ahead and
use language like that if it seems useful to signal that youre restating the main points of
your argument. In shorter papers you can usually simply reiterate the main point without
that metadiscourse: for example, What began as a protest about pollution turned into a
movement for civil rights. If thats the crux of the argument, your reader will recognize a
summary like that. Most of the student papers I see close the argument effectively in the
concluding paragraph.

The second task of a conclusionsituating the argument within broader implicationsis a


lot trickier. A lot of instructors describe it as the So what? challenge. Youve proven your
point about the role of agriculture in deepening the Great Depression; so what? I dont like
the so what phrasing because putting writers on the defensive seems more likely to inhibit
the flow of ideas than to draw them out. Instead, I suggest you imagine a friendly reader
thinking, OK, youve convinced me of your argument. Im interested to know what you
make of this conclusion. What is or should be different now that your thesis is proven? In
that sense, your reader is asking you to take your analysis one step further. Thats why a good
conclusion is challenging to write. Youre not just coasting over the finish line.
So, how do you do that? Recall from Chapter 3 that the third story of a three-story thesis
situates an arguable claim within broader implications. If youve already articulated a thesis
statement that does that, then youve already mapped the terrain of the conclusion. Your
task then is to explain the implications you mentioned: if environmental justice really is
the new civil rights movement, then how should scholars and/or activists approach it?
If agricultural trends really did worsen the Great Depression, what does that mean for
agricultural policy today? If your thesis, as written, is a two-story one, then you may want
to revisit it after youve developed a conclusion youre satisfied with and consider including
the key implication in that thesis statement. Doing so will give your paper even more
momentum.
Lets look at the concluding counterparts to the excellent introductions that weve read to
illustrate some of the different ways writers can accomplish the two goals of a conclusion:
Victor Seet on religious embodiment:5

A lot of people have that hang-up: If I thought of it, it cant be much of an insight. Its another
good reason to get others to read your work. Theyll remind you that your points are both original
and interesting.
5
Seet, Embodiment in Religion.
4

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Embodiment is fundamental to bridging reality and spirituality. The concept demonstrates how religious practice synthesizes human experience in realitymind,
body, and environmentto embed a cohesive religious experience that can recreate
itself. Although religion is ostensibly focused on an intangible spiritual world, its
traditions that eventually achieve spiritual advancement are grounded in reality.
The texts, symbols, and rituals integral to religious practice go beyond merely
distinguishing one faith from another; they serve to fully absorb individuals in
a culture that sustains common experiential knowledge shared by millions. It is
important to remember that human senses do not merely act as sponges absorbing
external information; our mental models of the world are being constantly refined
with new experiences. This fluid process allows individuals to gradually accumulate
a wealth of religious multimodal information, making the mental representation
hyper-sensitive, which in turn contributes to religious experiences. However, there
is an important caveat. Many features of religious visions that are attributed to
embodiment can also be explained through less complex cognitive mechanisms.
The repetition from religious traditions exercised both physically and mentally,
naturally inculcates a greater religious awareness simply through familiarity. Religious experiences are therefore not necessarily caused by embedded cues within the
environment but arise from an imbued fluency with religious themes. Embodiment
proposes a connection between body, mind, and the environment that attempts to
explain how spiritual transcendence is achieved through physical reality. Although
embodied cognition assuages the conflict between science and religion, it remains
to be seen if this intricate scientific theory is able to endure throughout millennia
just as religious beliefs have.

The paragraph first re-caps the argument, then explains how embodiment relates to other
aspects of religious experience, and finally situates the analysis within the broader relationship between religion and science.
From Davis OConnell:6

Looking at Abelard through the modern historical lens, it appears to many historians that he did not fit the 12th-century definition of a heretic in the sense that
his teachings did not differ much from that of the church. Mews observes that
Abelards conception of the Trinity was a continuation of what earlier Christian
leaders had already begun to ponder. He writes: In identifying the Son and Holy
Spirit with the wisdom and benignity of God, Abelard was simply extending an
idea (based on Augustine) that had previously been raised by William of Champeaux. St. Augustine was seen as one of the main Christian authorities during the
Middle Ages and for Abelard to derive his teachings from that source enhances his
credibility. This would indicate that although Abelard was not necessarily a heretic
by the churchs official definition, he was branded as one through all of the nontheological social and political connotations that heresy had come to encompass.

OConnell, interestingly, chooses a scholarly tone for the conclusion, in contrast to the
more jocular tone we saw in the introduction. He doesnt specifically re-cap the argument
about Abelards deviance from social norms and political pressures, but rather he explains
his summative point about what it means to be a heretic. In this case, the implications
of the argument are all about Abelard. There arent any grand statements about religion
OConnell, Abelard, 40.

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and society, the craft of historiography, or the politics of language. Still, the reader is not
left hanging. One doesnt need to make far-reaching statements to successfully conclude a
paper.
From Logan Skelly:7

Considering the hundreds of millions of years that S. aureus has been evolving
and adapting to hostile environments, it is likely that the past seventy years of
human antibiotic usage represents little more than a minor nuisance to these bacteria. Antibiotic resistance for humans, however, contributes to worldwide health,
economic, and environmental problems. Multi-drug resistant S. aureus has proven
itself to be a versatile and persistent pathogen that will likely continue to evolve as
long as selective pressures, such as antibiotics, are introduced into the environment.
While the problems associated with S. aureus have received ample attention in the
scientific literature, there has been little resolution of the problems this pathogen
poses. If these problems are to be resolved, it is essential that infection control measures and effective treatment strategies be developed, adopted, and implemented in
the future on a worldwide scaleso that the evolution of this pathogens virulence
can be curtailed and its pathogenicity can be controlled.

Skellys thesis is about the need to regulate antibiotic usage to mitigate antibiotic resistance.
The concluding paragraph characterizes the pathogens evolutionary history (without recapping the specifics) and then calls for an informed, well planned, and comprehensive
response.
All three conclusions above achieve both tasksclosing the argument and addressing
the implicationsbut the authors have placed a different emphasis on the two tasks and
framed the broader implications in different ways. Writing, like any craft, challenges the
creator to make these kinds of independent choices. There isnt a standard recipe for a good
conclusion.

Form and function


As Ive explained, some students mistakenly believe that they should avoid detail and
substance in the introductions and conclusions of academic papers. Having practiced the
five-paragraph form repeatedly, that belief sometimes gets built into the writing process;
students sometimes just throw together those paragraphs thinking that they dont really
count as part of the analysis. Sometimes though, student writers know that more precise
and vivid intros and outros are ideal but still settle on the vague language that seems familiar, safe, and do-able. Knowing the general form of academic writing (simplified in the
five-paragraph theme) helps writers organize their thoughts; however, it leads some student
writers to approach papers as mere fill-in-the-blank exercises.
I hope you will instead envision paper-writing as a task of working through an unscripted
and nuanced thought process and then sharing your work with readers. When youre
engaged with the writing process, youll find yourself deciding which substantive points
belong in those introductory and concluding paragraphs rather than simply filling those
paragraphs out with fluff. They should be sort of hard to write; theyre the parts of the paper
Skelly, Stapholococcus aureus, 97.

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that express your most important ideas in the most precise ways. If youre struggling with
intros and conclusions, it might be because youre approaching them in exactly the right
way. Having a clear, communicative purpose will help you figure out what your reader needs
to know to really understand your thinking.

Other resources
1. Writing in College, a guide by Joseph L. Williams (the co-author of Style) and Lawrence McEnerney for the University of Chicago, offers some excellent advice on
drafting and revising introductions and conclusions.
2. The Writing Center at the University of North Carolina also offers excellent advice
on writing introductions and conclusions.

3. Discoveries is a journal published by Cornell University from which the excellent


examples in this chapter were drawn. Its a great source of inspiration.

Exercises
1. Find some essays on plagiarism websites such as termpaperwarehouse.com,
allfreeessays.com, or free-college-essays.com and evaluate the quality of their introductions and conclusions based on the principles explained in this chapter.

2. Use this list maintained by the Council on Undergraduate Research to find some
peer-reviewed papers written by undergraduates in a field youre interested in.
Evaluate the quality of their introductions and conclusions based on the principles
explained in this chapter and talk about them with your classmates. As a group,
try to summarize what makes introductions and conclusions engaging for readers.

Intros and Outros|64

Chapter 8

Clarity and Concision

Writing like you drive


This and the following chapter discuss sentence-level composition, the kinds of things that
many people associate with writing. Writing guides, especially those targeted at college
students, offer excellent advice on sentence construction and word choice. However, many
student writers get hung up on sentence-level expression, thinking that only elegant, erudite
sentences will earn top grades. Or worse, some students assume that theyll never produce
strong papers if they do not already have some kind of inborn gift for wordsmithing. While
it is true that some people can produce extraordinarily elegant and graceful prose, it is also
true that anyone can learn to write effectively in ways that will persuade and satisfy readers.
Producing and reading elegant writing is a pleasure, but what really matters in academic
writing is precision.

Focusing first or only on sentence-level issues is a troublesome approach. Doing so is


like driving while looking only at the few feet of the road right in front of the bumper.
Experienced drivers instead take in the larger scene and more effectively identify and
avoid potential hazards with ongoing course corrections. Writing well is like that. When
youve put in the time and effort to take in the bigger picture of your analysis, most of the
micro-scale moves happen automatically. That is, if you have a well-developed thesis and
a carefully sequenced argument organized into cohesive and coherent paragraphs, many
of the sentence-level issues take care of themselves. Its easier to write effective sentences
when their purpose is clear. Youll still have to edit for clarity, concision, and mechanics, but
if the thinking process behind the writing is well developed, editing shouldnt be a huge
chore. It can actually be a satisfying part of the process. One common metaphor notes that
a good edit is like the last twist of a camera lens that brings the whole picture into focus.
One approach that often leads to a difficult writing process and a clunky result is the
pursuit of academese: an effort to write in an ornamented and scholarly way. As Michael
Harvey explains1, the desire to sound more academic might prompt a student to write To
satisfy her hunger for nutrition, she ate the bread rather than simply She was hungry, so
she ate the bread. It is true that a lot of academic writing is laden with unnecessary jargon,
Michael Harvey,The Nuts and Bolts of College Writing. (Indianapolis, IN: Hackett, 2003), 3.

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but the culture is shifting among scholars to favor plainer language and insist on clarity.
Your professors are much more likely to find a self-consciously highbrow writing style
tedious than impressive. As the saying goes2, any fool can make simple things complicated;
it takes a genius to make complicated things simple.
My hope with this chapter is to help you see those habits for yourself and, most importantly, how your readers experience them. If youve fallen prey to habits of academese, I
hope this chapter helps you develop a more straightforward writing style, one well-suited
to nuanced thinking and effective communication. And while I dont want you to think of
sentence-level wordsmithing as some kind of abstract, enchanted virtue, I do want you to
understand that clarity and concision are more than aesthetics. Convoluted or wordy prose
may contain some insightful or intriguing ideas, but if you can render those ideas in clear
and concise prose, then you will inevitably develop those ideas even further in the course of
writing. Unclear and bloated prose isnt just tedious to your reader; its a needless obstacle
to your own thinking.

One of our professors primary reasons for assigning writing assignments


is to evaluate how thoroughly we have digested the assigned reading
material and lectures. They are not as interested in our ability to write
Shakespearean prose as they are in our ability to absorb information,
wrestle with it until we can comprehend it, and then convey that understanding logically in writing. This is why writing assignments often start
something like, Drawing on Lockes narrative or Given what youve
read about Darth Vaders aversion to democratic governance .
It is important to note that this process presupposes that we actually read
the assigned readings and take notes during class lectures and discussions.
Unsurprisingly, the hardest writing assignments I have had in college
were the ones for which I was least prepared. I can try my darnedest to
write beautifully, but if I have not put in the necessary time to actually
read (and reread) the assigned material, I will have nothing meaningful to
say and my professors will see straight through my bloviating.
That being said, the writing process is actually a highly effective exercise
for digesting material and developing a cohesive argument. Often it is not
until I start writing that I realize the holes in my thinking and the areas
that I need to go back and study more thoroughly. This chapter provides
many great practical pointers for editing our papers in order to produce
clear, refined arguments and should be returned to frequently.
Peter Farrell
The best way to achieve clarity and concision in writing is to separate the drafting process
from the revision process. Highly effective writers routinely produce vague, tortuous, and
bloated drafts, and are happy to do so. It usually means that theyre onto an interesting
idea. Similarly, writers often write the same idea three or four different ways as theyre
Variously attributed to Albert Einstein, E.F. Schumacher, and Woody Guthrie.

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getting their thoughts down on paper. Thats fine. In fact, thats better than fine because
each repetition helps to develop key ideas and alternative approaches to the argument. A
snarly first draft is often a great achievement. One just needs to take the time to develop
relevant ideas and make them clear to the reader. For that reason, I write this section of the
chapter envisioning someone who has already cranked out a very rough draft and is now in
the process of revising for clarity and concision.

Revising for clarity: who did what to whom?


What makes a complex line of thinking easy to follow? The tricks of cohesion and coherence, discussed in Chapter 6, are a big help. Williams and Bizup offer another key point.
They explain that readers experience writing as clear when the character of a sentence
is also its grammatical subject and the key action a grammatical verb. They provide this
fanciful example:3
Once upon a time, as a walk through the woods was taking place on the part of
Little Red Riding Hood, the Wolf s jump out from behind a tree caused her fright.

Grammatically, the subject of the first part is a walk through the woods, and the verb is
taking place. The character, though, is obviously Little Red Riding Hood and the action
is walking. A much more straightforward versionAs Little Red Riding Hood walked
through the woodsmakes the character the subject and the action the key verb. That
example goes out of its way to be silly, but consider this example from a website offering
free college papers:4
Another event that connects the colonist and the English together is the event
of a hated King in England trying to take away freedom and go back to the old
ways. The idea of how much power the King had struck Parliament. After that, the
Parliament and the people made the King sign the Magna Carta, which limits the
amount of power the King has. The Magna Carta also affected the rights of the
American colonies. It practically took away all relationships between the King and
the colonies. After the relationship was broken, America broke off from England.

Apparently, the author is claiming that the colonists (in the 1700s?) pushed back against
the power of the English crown in a manner similar to the Parliamentarians in 1215 (after
having apparently been struck by an idea of how much power the King had). Grammatically, the subjects are an event and an idea rather than the characters, colonists,
the king, and Parliament. The third sentence is refreshingly straightforward in structure
(though vague on details). The fifth and sixth sentences are fairly straightforward, but also
incredibly vague: the Magna Carta predated the American colonies by at least 400 years5;
how does that document relate to the American Revolution? The last sentence essentially
says that after the relationship was broken, the relationship was broken. If the author were
to rewrite the passage to make the grammatical subjects match the characters, he or she
would be prompted to clarify what exactly the king, the Parliament, the English populace,
Williams and Bizup, Style, 29.
http://www.termpaperwarehouse.com/essay-on/History-Of-Magna-Carta/82596. Let this
example further demonstrate why you should never, ever even look at these websites.
5
Encyclopdia Britannica, s.v. Magna Carta.
3
4

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and the American colonists did (and to who), something which the author of the above
passage may not actually understand. This example illustrates how clarifying who did what
to whom for the reader also makes writers clarify it for themselves. Writing clearly involves
thinking clearly, and clear rigorous thinking is why your professors assign you writing in
the first place.
While the Magna Carta example is comically bad, heres one that is more or less logical but
would still benefit from greater clarity:
IgE-dependent allergic hypersensitivity reactions such as allergic asthma and
food allergy involve mast cells which are typically regarded as troublesome cells
as a result. Further, the allergic sensitization-processes also involves a role for mast
cells. Recent findings show that their functionality is not only pro-inflammatory,
but can on the contrary have suppressive or immunomodulatory effects in allergic
inflammation.

The above passage isnt a terrible slog, and its fairly clear that the whole passage is about
mast cells. But heres a version of the same passagethe real version as it werewhich
demonstrates that the passage feels a lot clearer when mast cells, the characters driving
the narrative, are also the grammatical subject of the sentence and the referent for the key
verbs:6
Mast cells are typically regarded as troublesome cells due to their prominent role in
IgE-dependent allergic hypersensitivity reactions such as allergic asthma and food
allergy. Further, it seems that mast cells are also able to play an additional role in the
allergic sensitization-processes. Recent findings show that mast cell functionality is
not only pro-inflammatory, but can on the contrary have suppressive or immunomodulatory effects in allergic inflammation.

Both versions of the passage are consistently about mast cells, but the second version makes
that consistency much more obvious to readers as mast cells are the main character of every
sentence. That clear consistency allows us to devote more of our brain power to recalling
technical terms (like immunomodulatory) and comprehending the key ideas. That makes it
both easier and more interesting to read.
To further illustrate the principle, lets take a nicely straightforward passage and rewrite it
so that the characters are objects (rather than subjects) and the actions are nouns7 (rather
than verbs). Heres the nicely clear original:8
What most people really feel nostalgic about has little to do with the internal
structure of 1950s families. It is the belief that the 1950s provided a more familyfriendly economic and social environment, an easier climate in which to keep kids
on the straight and narrow, and above all, a greater feeling of hope for a familys
long-term future, especially for its young.

Aletta D. Kraneveld and others, The two faces of mast cells in food allergy and allergic asthma:
The possible concept of Yin Yang, Biochimica et Biophysica Acta, 1822 (2012): 96.
7
When you turn a verb into a noun its called a nominalization. For example, act action, write
writings, or think thought.
8
Stephanie Coontz, The Way We Really Are: Coming to Terms with Americas Changing Families
(New York: Basic Books, 1997), 34.
6

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In these two sentences, the character is a belief rather than a person or thing. However,
the passage is still clear to the reader because it keeps the character consistent and explains
what that character does (creates nostalgia) to who (people at large). Imagine if the author
wrote this instead:
People feel nostalgic not about the internal structure of 1950s families. Rather, the
beliefs about how the 1950s provided a more family-friendly economic and social
environment, an easier climate in which to keep kids on the straight and narrow,
and above all, a greater feeling of hope for a familys long-term future (especially
for its young) are what lead to those nostalgic feelings.

This second version says substantially the same thing, but its tedious to read because the
character changes abruptly from people to beliefs (which works against cohesion) and
one has to get to the end of the sentence to learn how these beliefs fit in. The key point is
this: one of the best things you can do to revise for greater clarity is to recast a passage so
that the characters are the grammatical subjects and the key actions are the verbs.

Concision and grace


Chapter 7 on introductions and conclusions notes the importance of concision, as those
framing parts of the paper are often the most egregiously bloated. The general rule introduced there holds for any writing: every word and sentence should be doing some
significant work for the paper as a whole. Sometimes that work is more to provide pleasure
than meaningyou neednt ruthlessly eliminate every rhetorical flourishbut everything
in the final version should add something unique to the paper. As with clarity, the benefits
of concision are intellectual as well as stylistic: revising for concision forces writers to make
deliberate decisions about the claims they want to make and their reasons for making them.
Michael Harvey9 notes that fluffy, wordy prose does not necessarily result from an underdeveloped writing process. Sometimes it reflects the context of academic writing:
[M]any of us are afraid of writing concisely because doing so can make us feel
exposed. Concision leaves us fewer words to hide behind. Our insights and ideas
might appear puny stripped of those inessential words, phrases, and sentences in
which we rough them out. We might even wonder, were we to cut out the fat,
would anything be left? Its no wonder, then, that many students make little attempt to be concise[and] may, in fact, go out of their way not to be .

As noted in the opening example of Chapter 4, effortful thinking is something most people
naturally try to avoid most of the time. Its both arduous and anxiety provoking to go beyond
existing knowledge and assumptions to venture into unknown territory. In some ways, too,
the general structure of education conditions students to approach papers as blanks to be
filled rather than open-ended problems to explore. When students actively avoid concision,
its often because they want to avoid the hard thinking concision requires, they assume that
writing is all about expressing opinions rather than undertaking a rigorous thought process,
or they fear that they cant adequately perform and communicate an ambitious analysis.

Harvey, Nuts and Bolts, 1.

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One of the first things you will learn about writing in college is that you
have to be concise. It doesnt matter whether the paper is two pages or
ten; concision is key. If you start to lose your reader, expect a bad grade.
Professors want to see how well you can argue a point and this includes
how gracefully the paper flows as well as how long the readers attention
is kept. If you can incorporate concision, cohesion and grace into each
paper you write, then good grades are sure to follow.
Kaethe Leonard
Many writing guides describe editing strategies that produce a vivid, satisfying concision.10
Most of the advice boils down to three key moves:

1. Look for words and phrases that you can cut entirely. Look for bits that are redundant: (each and every, unexpected surprise, predictions about the future),
meaningless (very unique, certain factors, slightly terrifying), or clichd (as far
as the eye can see, or long march of time).
2. Look for opportunities to replace longer phrases with shorter phrases or words. For
example, the way in which can often be replaced by how and despite the fact
that can usually be replaced by although. Strong, precise verbs can often replace
bloated phrases. Consider this example: The goal of Alexander the Great was to
create a united empire across a vast distance. And compare it to this: Alexander
the Great sought to unite a vast empire.

3. Try to rearrange sentences or passages to make them shorter and livelier. Williams
and Bizup11 recommend changing negatives to affirmatives. Consider the negatives
in this sentence: School nurses often do not notice if a young schoolchild does not
have adequate food at home. You could more concisely and clearly write, School
nurses rarely notice if a young schoolchild lacks adequate food at home. It says
the same thing, but is much easier to read which makes for a happier and more
engaged reader.

Good parallelism can also help you write shorter text that better conveys your thinking. For
example, Stacy Schiff writes this in her best-selling biography of Cleopatra12:
A goddess as a child, a queen at eighteen, a celebrity soon thereafter, she was an
object of speculation and veneration, gossip and legend, even in her own time.

Imagine if, instead, Schiff wrote this:

Cleopatra was seen as divine when she was a child. She became the sovereign ruler
at eighteen, and she became well known throughout the ancient world early in her
reign. People speculated about her, worshipped her, gossiped about her, and told
legends about her, even in her own time.
Especially, Williams, Harvey, and Lanham; see other resources for full references.
Williams and Bizup, Style, 130.
12
Stacy Schiff, Cleopatra: A Life (Boston, MA: Back Bay Books, 2011), 1. This book is a great
read.
10
11

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The second version says the same thing, but the extra words tend to obscure Schiff s point.
The original (goddess as a child, queen at eighteen, celebrity soon thereafter) effectively uses
parallelism to vividly convey the dramatic shifts in Cleopatras roles and her prominence in
the ancient world.

Reading with concision and grace in mind


There is less tolerance for academese than there used to be in scholarly communities; however, a lot of landmark texts were written in a time when there wasnt such a high value
placed on clarity and concision. In your studies, then, you will probably have to engage with
important texts that violate almost all the advice given here.

Consider the following example from Talcott Parsons, a sociological theorist noted for
both his intellectual force and utterly impenetrable writing style. In reading this passage, 13
imagine ego and alter as two people interacting:
Communication through a common system of symbols is the precondition of this
reciprocity or complementarity of expectations. The alternatives which are open
to alter must have some measure of stability in two respects: first, as realistic possibilities for alter, and second, in their meaning to ego. This stability presupposes
generalization from the particularity of the given situations of ego and alter, both
of which are continually changing and are never concretely identical over any two
moments in time. When such generalization occurs, and actions, gestures, or symbols have more or less the same meaning for both ego and alter, we may speak
of a common culture existing between them, through which their interaction is
mediated.

Heres a version after I edited for concision using the three moves described above:

Reciprocity, or complementary expectations, depends on a common system of


symbols. The symbolic alternatives for alter must be stable, in that they are both
realistic for alter and meaningful to ego. That is, actions, gestures, or symbols must
have a shared and persistent meaning for ego and alter even though ego and alter
are in different situations and are constantly changing. When meanings are shared
and persistent, we may say that the interaction between alter and ego is mediated
by a common culture.

The revised version is about 30 percent shorter, and it demonstrates how concision makes
ones points come through more clearly. You will almost certainly have to read works of
authors who did not prioritize clarity and concision (or even cohesion and coherence), and
thats a drag. But knowing how wordiness interferes with clarity can help you distill essential meanings from challenging texts. In many ways, writing well and reading incisively
are two facets of the same cognitive skill set.

Talcott Parsons and Edward Shills eds., Toward a General Theory of Action. (Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1967), 105.
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Grace
Academic writing is not wholly utilitarian. An elegant and apt turn of phrase is satisfying
both to write and to read. While you cant often summon elegance out of nowhere, you can
learn a few structures that are often pleasing to the readers ear because they harmonize
what youre saying with how youre saying it.14 Here are two rhetorical tricks that you can
use to reinforce your points.

1. Balance. Readers often find balanced sentences and phrases pleasing. The Cleopatra
example above (goddess as a child, queen at eighteen, celebrity soon thereafter)
illustrates parallelism, which is one kind of balance: using parallel structures to
convey a parallel idea. This parallelism not only helps Schiff be powerfully concise,
it quickly and vividly conveys the idea that Cleopatra led a remarkable life. Williams and Bizup15 offer another example of an elegant sentence in which the two
parts are balanced in their structure:
A government that is unwilling to listen to the moderate hopes of its citizenry
must eventually answer to the harsh justice of its revolutionaries.
The same sentence with the parallel parts marked:

A government that is unwilling to listen to the moderate hopes of its citizenry


must eventually answer to the harsh justice of its revolutionaries.

The balanced structure and contrasting language reinforces the authors either-or
point: listen or answer; moderate hopes or harsh justice, citizenry or revolutionaries. The balanced structure adds rhetorical force to the argument.

2. Emphasis. Read these sentences out loud, or imagine yourself doing so:
Version 1:

But far and away, the largest weight-inducing food, out-stripping all others, was
the potato chip.16
Version 2:

But far and away, the potato chip was the largest weight-inducing food, outstripping all others.

The first version places a particular rhetorical emphasis on the potato chip because it comes
last in the sentence after a three-part build-up. The second version says the exact same
thing, and it isnt hard to see that potato chip is the key part of the sentence. However, the
rhetorical emphasis on the potato chip is somewhat weaker. This common rhetorical trick
is to put the part you want to emphasize at the very end of the sentence.
These are just two rhetorical structures that scholars have identified. You can find others
(Google rhetorical device) that you can bring into your repertoire. Most people cant set
out to write elegantly per se, and you certainly shouldnt spend your writing time crafting
Rhetoric refers to how meaning is overtly or subtly built into the structure of language.
In everyday language we often use the word rhetoric to describe speech or writing devoid of
substance, but thats not what the word means. This section describes often used structures
identified and explained by rhetoricians.
15
Williams and Bizup, Style, 171.
16
Michael Moss, Salt Sugar Fat: How the Food Giants Hooked Us (New York: Random House,
2013), 328.
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elegantly balanced sentences that have little to do with your argument or analysis. But the
more familiar you are with these rhetorical structures, the more often you can recognize
and use them.

Other resources
1. Richard Lanhams popular book (Revising Prose, 5th ed., New York: Longman, 2006)
offers a well specified method for turning academese into clear, straightforward
language. The Online Writing Laboratory at Purdue University offers a short
handout about Lanhams method.
2. Several writing centers at colleges and universities offer good advice for spotting
and avoiding clichs. Among the most useful are those at the University of Richmond, Foothill College, and the University of Texas.

Exercises
1. Rewrite these passages to make the characters the grammatical subjects and the
key actions the verbs. That is, make them clearer.

A. The scarcity of research funds for nutritional scientists means that offers by food
companies to fund such research may be especially attractive. The implicit pressure
to shape the language of the findings to avoid alienation between scholars and
companies is worrisome to consider.
B. While educational experiences are an obvious benefit of tribal colleges, the needs
tribal communities have for economic development, cultural vitality, and social ties
are also addressed by educational institutions.

2. Take these straightforward passages and make them less clear without changing
the meaning. Turn verbs into nouns and make subjects into objects.
A. Statisticians prepared to use spatial models need to keep the role of the models
in perspective. When scientific interest centers on the large-scale effects, the idea
is to use a few extra small-scale parameters so that the large-scale parameters are
estimated more efficiently.17

B. Social scientists will be led astray if they accept the lies organizations tell about
themselves. If, instead, they look for places where the stories told dont hold up, for
the events and activities those speaking for the organization ignore, cover up, or
explain away, they will find a wealth of things to include in the body of material
from which they construct their definitions.18

3. Edit these passages for concision, using the three moves described above. Be sure
to preserve all of the meaning contained in the original.
A. Each and every student enrolled in our educational institutions deserves and
is entitled to competent instruction in all of the key academic areas of study. No
student should be without ample time and help in mastering such basic skills.

Noel A.C. Cressie, Statistics for Spatial Data (New York: Wiley, 1991), 435.
Howard S. Becker, Tricks of the Trade: How To Think About Your Research While Youre Doing It
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998), 118.
17
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B. If you really have no choice in regards to avoiding a long and extended bureaucratic process in making your complaint, it is very important that you write down
and document every aspect of the case for use by all of the parties involved in the
process.

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Chapter 9

Getting the Mechanics Right

Correctness in writing
Many students assumeor fearthat college writing is judged primarily on its grammatical correctness. Ideas, evidence, and arguments matter more than the mechanics of
grammar and punctuation; however, many of the rules of formal writing exist to promote
clarity and precision which writers much achieve in order to effectively convey ideas, evidence, and arguments. In addition, texts that observe the rules of formal written English
tend to be more persuasive by making the author appear well informed and careful. Writing
replete with errors does not make a great impression, and most educators want to help
students present themselves well. Correctness, then, isnt the most important thing, but it
does matter.

Another common assumption among students is that one is either good at grammar or
not good at grammar, and that such is ones immutable fate. Not true. Once you master a
particular rule or practice, it becomes second nature, and then you can focus your attention
on mastering another. I finally nailed down commas and semicolons in college and some
finer points of grammar in graduate school. I do a lot of formal writing in the course of my
career, and I still look things up in a writing handbook from time to time. You can master
the practices of formal written English, and college is a great time to use the feedback from
your professors to identify your common errors and learn to correct them.
In thinking about correctness, its important to recognize that some rules are more important than others. Joseph Williams helpfully distinguishes three kinds of rules.1 First, there
are rules that are basic to English, such as the car not car the. For example,
INCORRECT: I thought whether true claims not.
CORRECT: I hadnt thought about whether the claims were true.

If youve gotten most of your formal education in English, you probably observe these rules
routinely. If your writing has mismatches of number (singular/plural) or tense, it might be
The three types of rules are explained in Williams and Bizups Style. Williams first described
invented rules in J.M. Williams, A Phenomenology of Error, College Composition and
Communication, 32, no. 2 (1981): 152-168.
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due to haste or carelessness rather than unawareness. Similarly, capitalizing the first word
of a sentence and ending with appropriate punctuation are basic rules that most people
comply with automatically when writing for a professor or in other formal situations.

Williams second category is comprised of rules that distinguish standard written English
from the informal variants that people use in their day-to-day lives. Most students with
middle-class and non-immigrant backgrounds use informal vernaculars that closely parallel standard written English. Students with working-class or more modest backgrounds
or who are members of transnational and multi-lingual communities may use informal
variants of English in their everyday lives that are quite different from standard written
English. Its an unfortunate reality of social inequality that such students have to expend
more effort than their middle-class English-speaking counterparts to master the standard
conventions. Its not really fair, but at least the mechanics and rules of formal writing are
documented and unambiguous. Learning to communicate effectively in different social
contexts is part of becoming an educated person.
Some examples:

INFORMAL:We aint got no more of them cookies.


FORMAL: We dont have any more of those cookies.
INFORMAL: My coat, my phone, and my keys was all lock in the car.
FORMAL: My coat, my phone, and my keys were all locked in the car.
INFORMAL: u shd go 2 caf b4 wrk bc coffee
FORMAL: You should go the caf before work to get some coffee.

The informal versions are clearly English, and theyre widely understandable to others.
The first and second examples contain choices of tense, number, and punctuation that are
inappropriate in standard written English even though they dont actually impede communication. Most students already understand that these first two categories of rules (rules
fundamental to English and the rules of standard written English) are obligatory for formal
writing.
There is a third category of rules that Williams notes and enthusiastically criticizes; he calls
them invented rules because they usually arise from busybody grammarians rather than
enduring patterns of customary language use. Some invented rules Williams calls options:
those that your reader will notice when you observe them and not care if you dont. Heres
an example of the fabled dont-end-a-sentence-with-a-preposition rule:
OBSERVING THE RULE: With which concept can we analyze this problem?
IGNORING THE RULE: Which concept can we analyze this problem with?

Some grammarians would claim that only the first version is correct. However, you probably have the (accurate) impression that professional writers are much more likely to choose
the second version. This rule does not reflect real-life customary practice, even in standard
written English. Thats why Williams calls it an invented rule. Most of your professors are
fine with the second version above, the one that ends a sentence with a preposition.

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Similarly, theres this murky idea out there that one should not split infinitives; that is, one
should not have any words between to and the verb that follows. Heres an example:
OBSERVED: to go boldly where no one has gone before
IGNORED: to boldly go where no one has gone before

Again, while some grammarians have argued that conscientious writers should avoid
splitting infinitives, most professional writers have ignored that claim. The second version,
which puts the adverb (boldly) within the infinitive (that is, between to and go) makes
for a perfectly clear and pleasing phrase. The invented rule about splitting infinitives is an
attempt to solve a problem that doesnt exist. If you want to give your writing more of a
scholarly air, you could observe some or all of these optional rules. But, unless your professor has a particular penchant for one of these invented rules, you can safely ignore them.
Williams calls the second sub-category of invented rules folklore. Theyre invented rules
(like options) in that grammarians think writers should observe them, but, in reality, no
one does. Williams gleefully lists instances in which the very grammarians who propose
these rules go on to unselfconsciously violate them.2 You may have heard of these rules, but
theyre widely considered absurd.
For example, some grammarians are dismayed that people use that and which interchangeably, and they argue that writers should use that to indicate restrictive elements
and which to indicate non-restrictive elements. A restrictive element is one that makes a
necessary specification about something; a non-restrictive element is one that simple adds
extra information. Consider these two examples:

Version 1:
The party that Alex went to was shut down by the police.

Version 2:
The party which Alex went to was shut down by the police.

For almost all readers, versions 1 and 2 are saying the exact same thing. For the persnickety
grammarian, version 1 is specifying the party that Alex went to, and not the party that,
say, Jordan went to, while version 2 is simply inserting extra information about Alexs
attendance at the party. According to these grammarians, that Alex went to adds critically needed information (restrictive) while which Alex went to adds bonus information
(non-restrictive).
As Williams and some others explain: its bullshit. Professional writers use commas and
carefully chosen words to do the job of distinguishing restrictive and non-restrictive elements, and they choose whichever relative pronoun (that or which) sounds better in
context. You could observe the distinction between that and which if you like, but no one
would notice. More importantly, observing this invented rule wouldnt necessarily make
your writing any clearer, more concise, or more graceful.

There is one rule that Williams calls folklore that you probably have to observe in college
papers nonetheless: that is, the rule that you cant start sentences with But, And, So, For, or
Yet (or other coordinating conjunctions). Im sure you could browse through assigned read J.M. Williams, Phenomenology of Error

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ings and articles published in major newspapers and magazines that violate this so-called
rule. Here are two examples that took me about 10 minutes to find:
From the front page of the New York Times January 7, 2014:3 But since the financial crisis, JPMorgan has become so large and profitable that it has been able to
weather the governments legal blitz, which has touched many parts of the banks
sprawling operations. And a little further down we see, Yet JPMorgans shares are
up 28 percent over the last 12 months.
From a news article in Science, December 21, 2007:4 Altered winds blew in more
warm air from the subtropics only in models in which mid-latitude oceans warmed
as observed; apparently, the warmer oceans altered the circulation. And that ocean
warming is widely viewed as being driven by the strengthening greenhouse.

If youre writing a paper for my class, feel free to begin sentences with conjunctions. As
the above examples show, its a concise way to support clarity and effective flow. However,
I suspect most instructors still hold to the old rule. Thus, you shouldnt start sentences with
And, But or other coordinating conjunctions unless youve been specifically invited to.

There are countless other rules that I dont discuss here. The point of these examples is to
show that you dont have to observe every little rule youve ever heard of. There are some
elements of mechanics that you have to master; I summarize some common ones below.
These practices will gradually become second nature. Its sometimes hard to know at the
outset which rules are standard, which are options, and which are folklore. With the help
of a good handbook and your instructors, youll learn them over time. The larger point I
want to make here is that that observing rules isnt about traversing a minefield of potential
errors; its just about learning and adopting the practices appropriate to your audience,
which is one of the first rules of writing well.

Elements of punctuation and language you


must master
If youve gotten most or all of your formal education in English, youve mastered the vast
majority of the real rules of grammar. Most of the students I work with just have to nail
down a few additional practices to produce appropriate academic writing. There isnt any
great secret to learning them; theyre learned through repeated practice and feedback.

1. Comma usage
I didnt really master correct comma usage until my college years. There was a year or so in
which I constantly checked my work against a style guide, but since then I havent often
had to think about commas. Heres a brief run-down of the rules of comma usage that I see
many students violating. For a more complete explanation, and an invaluable set of online
exercises, see the website of handbook author Diana Hacker.
Peter Eavis, Steep Penalties Taken in Stride by JPMorgan Chase, New York Times, January 7,
2014, page A1.
4
Richard A. Kerr, Global Warming Coming Home to Roost in the American Midwest, Science
318, no. 5858 (2007): 1859.
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A. Use a comma to join two independent clauses with a coordinating


conjunction:
CORRECT: Her misdeed was significant, but the punishment was excessive.
ALSO CORRECT: Her misdeed was significant but justified by the circumstances.

In the first example, the comma is telling the reader that one clause (her misdeed was
significant) is ending and another (the punishment was excessive) beginning. The second
example does not use a comma, because the words that follow but (justified by the circumstances) do not add up to an independent clause; they make a dependent clause that
could not stand alone as a sentence.

Note: Because is NOT a coordinating conjunction. Its a subordinating conjunction.


Therefore, it does not use a comma:
INCORRECT: Conspiracy theories can be compelling, because many people distrust the government.
CORRECT: Conspiracy theories can be compelling because many people distrust
the government.

Because, like other subordinating conjunctions (such as although, unless, or until),


is meant to knit together one indivisible thought; hence, no comma. Including a comma
weakens the connection in the mind of your reader.

B. Use a comma to mark the end of an introductory element


CORRECT: While we were eating, the baby crawled out of the room.
CORRECT: Alongside the road, we found the perpetrators gun.
CORRECT: Because many distrust the government, conspiracy theories can be
compelling.

The first example would be comically confusing without the comma. The second example
shows how the comma helps your reader separate the introductory element from the part
that followed. The third example might be confusing. The sentence from part A, above, beginning with Conspiracy theories does not use a comma, but in this example, a dependent
clause is serving as as an introductory element.

Learn these rules, and if you hate them, learn to love them. In college,
writing stops being about how well did you understand fill-in-the-blank
and becomes how professionally and strongly do you argue your point.
Professionalism, I have found, is the key to the real world, and college is,
in part, preparing you for it. If you do not learn how to write in a way that
projects professionalism (i.e. these rules), then expect to get, at best, Cs
on your papers.
Kaethe Leonard

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C. Use a comma to set off non-essential information (so-called nonrestrictive elements)


Both of these sentences are correct, but they convey different ideas:

EXAMPLE 1: Gathering places vital to their communities are worth the


investment.
EXAMPLE 2: Gathering places, vital to their communities, are worth the
investment.

The first says that only those gathering places that are vital to their communities are worth
the investment (implying that some are not vital and therefore not worth investing in). In
that first example, vital to their communities is a restrictive element. In the second example
vital to their communities is extra information. The sentence implies that gathering places
in general are worth the investment (ostensibly because theyre vital to their communities).
The commas mark the phrase as non-essential information, which is a non-restrictive element. In writing the second sentence, you might enclose the non-essential information in
parentheses instead.

2. Use punctuation and coordinating conjunctions to


avoid sentence fragments
At some point, you were probably instructed that all sentences must have a subject (which
includes a noun) and a predicate (which includes a verb) and that they must be written to
stand alone. Consider this example of a sentence fragment:
INCORRECT: When you go to the supermarket. You dont often think about the
work behind the scenes.

It has a subject (you) and predicate (go to the supermarket), but the when indicates that
the sentence is incomplete. When people write sentence fragments, they usually have the
missing elements in the preceding or following sentences, so its really a punctuation error.
CORRECT: When you go to the supermarket, you dont often think about the
work behind the scenes.
ALSO CORRECT: You dont often think about the work behind the scenes when
you go to the supermarket.

In the first version the dependent clause (the part that couldnt stand alone) comes first,
necessitating a comma. In the second, the main clause (the part that could stand alone)
comes first, so no comma is used.

3. Use punctuation and coordinating conjunctions to


avoid run-on sentences and comma splices
A run-on sentence (one that smooshes two sentences together) may be incorrectly connected with a comma, which is then called a comma splice. This error is easily corrected
with punctuation and some coordinating words.

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INCORRECT (run-on): The Epic of Gilgamesh is one of the earliest literary


works it had a major influence on Mesopotamian culture.
INCORRECT (comma splice): The Epic of Gilgamesh is one of the earliest literary works, it had a major influence on Mesopotamian culture.

Clearly, the writer wants the reader to see these two sentences as connected. He or she has
three options to show their reader how the sentences relate.
CORRECT OPTION 1 (semi-colon): The Epic of Gilgamesh is one of the earliest literary works; it had a major influence on Mesopotamian culture.

The semi-colon is an elegant and underutilized option. By joining two sentences with a
semi-colon, the writer can subtly tell the reader that the epics earliness and influence,
together, make it important.
CORRECT OPTION 2 (comma and coordinating conjunction): The Epic of
Gilgamesh is one of the earliest literary works, and it had a major influence on
Mesopotamian culture.

The use of and in this option also tells the reader to put the two claims together. A more
specific conjunctionsuch as but, so, or yetis usually a better choice than and or
a semi-colon because it would provide more information about how the two claims relate.
CORRECT OPTION 3 (separate sentences): The Epic of Gilgamesh is one of
the earliest literary works. It had a major influence on Mesopotamian culture.

If you dont want your reader to consider the two sentences closely related, you can convey
that by choosing separate sentences. With the Gilgamesh example, you might choose this
option if the paragraph is mostly about the influence of the epic on Mesopotamian culture
but you have a good reason to include a sentence about how early it is. These two sentences
would function well as the first two sentences of an introductory paragraph.

4. Use colons correctly for lists, quotations, and


explanatory information
INCORRECT: We packed: clothes, camping equipment, and a first-aid kit.
CORRECT: We packed the essentials: clothes, camping equipment, and a first-aid
kit.

For lists, use a colon when the part before the colon can stand alone as a sentence. Otherwise, leave the colon out (We packed clothes, camping equipment, and a first-aid kit).
INCORRECT: Mitchell explains that: Part of the fascination of Gilgamesh is
that, like any great work of literature, it has much to tell us about ourselves.5
CORRECT: Mitchell explains the power of the epic: Part of the fascination of
Gilgamesh is that, like any great work of literature, it has much to tell us about
ourselves.6
Stephen Mitchell, Gilgamesh: A New English Version (New York: Free Press, 2004).
Ibid.

5
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You can use a colon to introduce a quote if the parts before and after the colon can stand
as complete sentences. A comma is an option here as well. Introducing a quote with your
own complete sentence and a colon is another underutilized trick in student writing. Recall
from Chapter 5 that you have to use source material within your own analytical thread.
Introducing a quote with your own complete sentence can make it immediately clear why
the quote you choose is important to your argument.

5. Use modifiers clearly and precisely


Modifiers are words and phrases that add information to a sentence. They specify the
meaning of (that is, they modify) a noun or verb. Sometimes the modifier is misplaced,
ambiguous, or not clearly pertaining to a noun or verb (a so-called dangling modifier).
These problems can lead the reader to wonder what exactly youre claiming.
MISPLACED: The ski-jumper looked sleek in his new suit weighing only 140
pounds.
CORRECT: The ski-jumper looked sleek wearing a new suit and weighing only
140 pounds.

The suit didnt weigh 140 pounds (one hopes); the ski-jumper did.

AMBIGUOUS: When formal rules and day-to-day practices differ, they should
be changed.
CLEAR: Formal rules should be changed to match day-to-day practices.
CLEAR: Day-to-day practices should be changed to match the formal rules.

In the first version, its not clear what should be changed. The two clear versions make it
obvious what the author is arguing.
DANGLING: Walking down the street, the houses glowed pink in the sunset.
CORRECT: Walking down the street, she saw houses glowing pink in the sunset.

The first version suggests that the houses were walking down the street. The pronoun to
which that first phrase refers (she) is missing. The second version corrects that by bringing
in the needed pronoun.

6. Choose correct words


Many wrong-word errors that I see seem to be artifacts of the spell-checkers built into
word-processing programs. For example, I often see costumers where students meant
customers, defiantly instead of definitely and, somewhat comically, martial instead
of marital.

Other wrong-word errors come from homonyms, two or more words that sound the same,
such as the there/their/theyre or your/youre errors. In college writing, another common
one is the misuse of effect/affect. Use effect if youre talking about the result of a cause as a
noun, and affect if you mean influence or talking about emotion in psychology (in which
case its pronounced AF-fect).
CORRECT: The effects of the conflict have been long-lasting.
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CORRECT: The conflict has affected everyday life throughout the country.
CORRECT: Research shows that the presence of living plants impact both cognition and affect.

Effect can also be a verb, in which case it means to bring about:

CORRECT: The conflict effected major international policy changes.

That sentence is saying that the conflict brought about policy changes. If you wanted to say
that the conflict influenced (but did not itself cause) policy changes, you would write that
the conflict affected policy changes.

The dilemma of gendered language in


English
What to do about gender with an unspecified subject? In the past, the consensus was to
always use he and readers were supposed to understand that the subject might be female.
As you know, thats no longer accepted. The culture of formal academic writing hasnt settled
on a widely supported solution yet, which creates a pervasive problem for the student writer.

Informally, using they/their as the neutral singular is becoming a common practice. For
example, if a Facebook friend hasnt specified a gender, Facebook used to exhort you to
write on their timeline for their birthday. I hear this more and more in spoken language
as well. For example, most people who hear this sentence spoken wouldnt note a glaring
problem: A doctor who makes a mistake is often too scared to admit their slip-up. However, in an academic paper, that sentence would be considered a pronoun-antecedent error
because doctor is singular and their is still considered plural. Most of your professors still
dont accept they/their as a gender-neutral singular possessive. Hopefully in coming years,
academic writing will come to accept this perfectly reasonable solution to the gendered
language problem, but were not there yet.

My first semester in college, it was my standard practice to rotate back and


forth between the male and female pronouns. I did not want to appear
sexist and was unsure how to avoid doing so. Referring to the same hypothetical person in one of my papers I wrote, When one is confronted by
new information that does not fit tidily onto her personal map Later
in the paragraph I referred to the same individual by saying, This new information demands that he forsake the world of the Cave in which he had
been raised. Obviously, in retrospect, that was confusing and certainly
not the best option. But it illustrates the point that this can be a challenging dilemma. Thankfully for you, three more appropriate solutions
are provided in this chapter.
Peter Farrell
So what to do? Here are three possible solutions.
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1. Choose plurals when possible. For example, Doctors who make mistakes are often
too scared to admit their slip-ups.

2. Write he or she or his or her if its not too repetitive. You dont want to have more
than two or three such ors in a paragraph, but a couple wouldnt be tedious for the
reader. For example, one might write, A doctor who makes a mistake is often too
scared to admit his or her slip-up. He or she might be forbidden from doing so by
hospital attorneys.

3. Consider whether a real-life example is better than a hypothetical subject. Long passages
about hypothetical people and situations often lack argumentative force. If youre
writing a paper about medical errors, you might do better to replace hypothetical
claims like the above example with real-life examples of physicians who have made
mistakes but were reluctant or forbidden to acknowledge them. Better yet, discuss
the results of studies of medical errors and their outcomes. In addition to solving
the gendered language problem, real examples are more persuasive.

Remember, its about precision and respect. Whatever you do, dont just write he for doctors, attorneys, and construction workers and she for nurses, social workers, and flight
attendants. You also shouldnt just write he or his for everything, expecting your readers
to mentally fill in the or she and or her themselves. Doing so seems lazy, if not actively
sexist. Showing respect through precise language about gender makes you seem much more
credible.

Conclusion
This chapter does not (and could not) provide a complete run-down of formal English
language usage. You would do well to bookmark a couple good reference sources to consult
when questions arise. If your writing usually has a lot of errors in it, dont despair. Identify
one or two practices to master and then learn them, using the feedback from your instructors as a guide. You cant become a flawless writer overnight (and no one writes flawlessly
all the time). But over the course of a few semesters, you can certainly produce more precise
text that presents your ideas in their best light.

Exercises and other resources


1. As noted above, the website associated with Diana Hackers popular writing guides
offer excellent practice in grammar and mechanics. If you keep getting dinged in
your papers for misplaced apostrophes, for example, you can review a lesson and
take practice quizzes on that site until you nail it. She also provides exercises especially useful to writers learning English as a second (or third or fourth) language.
2. Most college libraries subscribe to online reference sources for their students. Go
to your librarys website and look for proprietary guides like the Oxford Dictionary
of American Usage and Style. These are often of much higher quality than the first
few hits you get on Google.

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Writing in College: From Competence to Excellence

Guptill

3. In Andrea Lunsfords The Everyday Writer 5th ed. (New York: Bedford-St.Martins,
2012) she includes a list of the 20 most common errors in student writing. This site,
like Diana Hackers, also offers free online exercises in mechanics.

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